Dear papanya Valerie and all...

Mengenai vaksin MMR ini sudah lama banget menjadi kontroversi. Hal 
ini sesungguhnya berawal dari penelitian Andrew Wakefield. Beliau 
menjadi Ketua sebuah penelitian tentang kemungkinan hubungan antara 
autisme dan vaksin MMR. Sejak itu, sejumlah organisasi kesehatan 
dunia seperti WHO, American Academy of Pediatrics, the National 
Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 
melakukan sejumlah penelitian dan MENYANGKAL hasil penelitian 
Wakefield tersebut.

Sekarang 10 dari 13 orang peneliti yang ikut dalam penelitian 
Wakefield telah menarik kembali riset tsb. Bahkan the Lancet, jurnal 
penerbit penelitian si Wakefield sendiri telah mencetak penarikan 
hasil riset tsb. 

Sejumlah peneliti juga menyatakan bahwa penelitian tsb adalah CACAT, 
karena hanya menggunakan 12 anak sebagai sample. Bukan jumlah yang 
cukup untuk mewakili populasi. Keterangan selengkapnya saya posting 
di bawah ya.

Jadi aybun… jangan takut lagi untuk memberikan vaksin MMR ya. Aman 
kok. Aku sudah kasih Raj vaksin MMR dan Alhamdulillah gak ada 
masalah. Imunisasi adalah tanda cinta kita untuk anak, untuk 
investasi seumur hidupnya. Kalo di beberapa negara maju, anak2 yang 
mau masuk sekolah playgroup ato kindergarden harus lengkap 
imunisasinya dulu, termasuk MMR (kalo disana MMR termasuk imunisasi 
wajib). Kalau memang bermasalah, pasti deh mereka udah pada autis 
semua dan MMR udah di recall dari dulu. iYa kan…

Kalau masih belum percaya juga, coba deh browsing di CDC, WHO ato 
AAP, pasti buanyak banget laporan penelitian yang menyangkal hubungan 
antara vaksinasi MMR dan Autisme.

Kalau ada isyu yang meresahkan, sebaiknya memang kita harus terus 
mencari informasi yang benar... pada lembaga atau sumber yang sudah 
diakui kredibilitasnya. 

Semoga kita bisa terus menjadi konsumen kesehatan yang bijak.


with LUv,
:: iMeL bundana RaJ ::
--- 


http://www.kidshealth.org/PageManager.jsp?
dn=KidsHealth&lic=1&ps=107&cat_id=4&article_set=34122 


Controversial Study Withdrawn Suggesting Link Between Autism and MMR 
Vaccine
March 9, 2004

In 1998, Andrew Wakefield headed a group of researchers in publishing 
a 
much-disputed study that suggested a possible link between autism and 
the 
measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine. Since then, several studies have 
found no clear evidence to link MMR and autism, and all major health 
organizations - including the American Academy of Pediatrics, the 
National 
Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 
and 
the World Health Organization - have rejected Dr. Wakefield's claims. 
Still, fear of the MMR vaccine has caused some parents to avoid 
immunizing 
their children, leaving them susceptible to diseases that once killed 
thousands.

Now, 10 out of its 13 authors are retracting, or taking back, the 
controversial 1998 study. The Lancet, the journal in which the 1998 
study 
was published, printed the retraction in the March 6 issue. The 
authors 
write: "We wish to make it clear that in this paper no causal link 
was 
established between MMR vaccine and autism as the data were 
insufficient. 
However, the possibility of such a link was raised and consequent 
events 
have had major implications for public health. In view of this, we 
consider now is the appropriate time that we should together formally 
retract the interpretation placed upon these findings in the paper."

Dr. Wakefield, who did not sign the retraction, believes that the MMR 
vaccine causes abnormalities in the intestines that lead to the 
release of 
toxic chemicals that cause autism when they reach the brain. However, 
most 
medical experts have agreed for years that his study is critically 
flawed. 
The most notable problems with Dr. Wakefield's 1998 study were that 
it:

involved only 12 children - not a large enough sampling to generalize 
to 
the entire population
didn't use a control group - that is, it only studied autism in 
vaccinated 
children, and didn't compare the incidence of the condition in 
unvaccinated children

proposed a link between the timing of the MMR vaccine and the onset 
of 
symptoms of autism without addressing two issues: one, that because 
MMR is 
given around the time that autism is commonly diagnosed (12 to 15 
months), 

the association of the vaccine to the symptoms might be coincidental; 
and 
two, that in several of the studied children the symptoms of autism 
pre-dated the vaccination

About Autism

Autism is a developmental disorder that affects as many as one in 500 
people in the United States. Usually diagnosed in toddlers, it's 
characterized by mild to severe impairment of communication and 
social 
interaction skills. Although a specific cause of autism has not been 
found, several theories exist.

Although the number of children diagnosed with autism is increasing, 
the 
rates of MMR vaccination are not; in London, diagnosis of autistic 
disorders has been on the rise since 1979 but hasn't increased since 
routine MMR vaccination began in 1988. In addition, the age of 
diagnosis 
of autism has been found to be the same whether a child receives the 
MMR 
vaccine or doesn't. What many researchers are discovering is that 
subtle 
symptoms of autism are often present before a child's first birthday -
 
sometimes even in early infancy - but often go unnoticed until the 
symptoms are more obvious to parents.

So what could explain the increased rates of autism in recent years? 
For 
one thing, a broader definition of autism that can be applied to more 
children who show varying degrees of symptoms. There's also been a 
greater 
awareness of the condition among health professionals, which has lead 
to 
more diagnoses.

As for what causes the condition, medical experts believe it may be a 
combination of factors. A genetic basis is suspected, evidenced by 
the 
fact that the identical twin of a child with an autistic disorder 
will 
have a 92% chance of having one, too, while a fraternal twin has only 
a 
10% chance. Research also points to the possibility that other 
factors, 
such as toxins or viral infections, may cause or trigger autism 
before 
birth.

Medical researchers all over the world continue to investigate the 
possible causes of autism.

Reviewed by: Steven Dowshen, MD
Date reviewed: March 2004





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