Bad science, shrewd politics?
It’s indisputable that autism is on the rise among children. The question is, What’s causing it? And we go back and forth, and there’s strong evidence that indicates that it’s got to do with a preservative in vaccines. — Senator John McCain |
And with that pronouncement, Senator John McCain touched one of the most politically controversial questions in modern medicine. He's right on the increase in diagnoses of autism. He's wrong on the alleged link between thimerosal and autism:
Several large-scale studies have found no evidence of a link between thimerosal and autism, and medical groups including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Institute of Medicine and the American Academy of Pediatrics have publicly stated as much. In January, California reported an increase in autism cases, despite the removal of thimerosal from most vaccines.But because the parents who fervently believe that the government and vaccine provenders have somehow conspired to cripple their children trust none of the science, Senator McCain's comment on autism arguably represented shrewd politics.
In February, an international team of researchers, analyzing blood samples from vaccinated children, found that blood levels of ethyl mercury “fell rapidly and had largely returned to baseline levels by Day 11 after vaccination.” Those levels fell much more rapidly, for instance, than levels of the mercury people absorb by eating fish — suggesting that the injected thimerosal is less likely to build up in the blood, the researchers concluded.
This is not the first time that the Republican presidential campaign has encountered a politically contentious scientific issue. At a May 2007 debate, three candidates — Sam Brownback, Mike Huckabee, and Tom Tancredo — indicated that they did not believe in evolution:
The May 2007 debate | Mike Huckabee explains further |
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To his credit, Senator McCain did answer a simple yes when that question first arose.
Evolution denial has deep consequences for environmental policy. I'll go further: no person who denies the overwhelming scientific case for evolution has any business being President. As I write this, the last of the deniers in the Republican field is being eliminated — by Senator McCain, who has shown in an arguably less contentious context that he too can and will deny science when doing so confers a putative political advantage.
God save the United States.
1 Comments:
There is an unfortunate suggestion in the subtext of your post that parents wary of thimerosal in vaccines are somehow similar to people who deny evolution. If you can't appreciate the difference between someone who believes evolution is "just a theory" because all it has behind it is evidence (not conclusive proof) and someone who, seeing the studies on thimerosal, still thinks it an unwarranted risk for their child, you have a real blind spot. Environmentally-sourced methyl mercury is already too high according to most of the pediatric neurology work to date and thimerosal-free vaccines have been shipping in the US for many years. I won't be voting for McCain and he misspoke, obviously. But on proof issues of this sort, you should take greater care not to mix apples and oranges.
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