Autism Awareness

Autism Awareness
Proud mom of a son with autism!
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About Me

Burlington, NC, United States
All I can say about me is that I am a survivor of domestic violence. The only good thing that came out of my first marriage is that I have three wonderful sons and that I am now a much stronger person, I have grown into a better person. I am now married to a great man who has adopted my sons, and loves them as his own, as they are his now..he even says that the two younger ones look like him...my life is good. I have a son with autism so that has become a goal in my life, to help raise awareness and find a cure. I also have a son that is Bi-polar, and well all I can say is that autism is easy to deal with compared to Bi-polar disorder, well that is a little blurb about me.

Listen to music as you read!!!!


Thursday, February 12, 2009

MMR and Autism

Before this came out, I had more than one reason to personally believe MMR is not the cause of Autism. Just my personal thoughts, experience and information I had been told by other parents. Too many people still have autism even though they were not vaccinated at all....
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Thursday, February 12, 2009

A special vaccine court ruled against parents with autistic children Thursday, saying that vaccines are not to blame for their children's neurological disorder.


The judges in the cases said the evidence was overwhelmingly contrary to the parents' claims — and backed years of science that found no risk.


"It was abundantly clear that petitioners' theories of causation were speculative and unpersuasive," the court concluded in one of a trio of cases ruled on Thursday.


The ruling, which was anxiously awaited by health authorities, was a blow to families who have filed more than 5,000 claims for compensation through the government's Vaccine Injury Compensation Program. The claims are reviewed by special masters serving on the U.S. Court of Claims.


To win, the families' attorneys had to show that it was more likely than not that the autism symptoms in the children were directly related to a combination of the measles-mumps-rubella shots and other shots that at the time carried a mercury-containing preservative called thimerosal.


But the court concluded that "the weight of scientific research and authority" was "simply more persuasive on nearly every point in contention.
"

The court still has to rule on separate claims from other families who contend that rather than a specific vaccine combination, the lone culprit could be thimserosal, a preservative that is no longer in most routine children's vaccines.
But in Thursday's rulings, the court may have sent a signal on those cases, too:

"The petitioners have failed to demonstrate that thimerosal-containing vaccines can contribute to causing immune dysfunction," a judge wrote about one theory that the families proposed to explain how autism might be linked.


In 2001, parents began filing petitions for compensation through the vaccine compensation program. In all, more than 5,300 claims were eventually filed alleging that vaccines caused autism or autism-like symptoms.


The petitioners originally sought to present three different theories of how vaccines could cause autism. For each theory, there were to be three test cases.


SOURCE: http://www. foxnews. com/story/0,2933,491526,00. html