July 06, 2005
By DAN OLMSTED
Who knew the longest word in the English language would be the best one to
explain what is wrong with a newspaper article?
The word is related to establishment bias, and the newspaper in question is none
other than The New York Times.
June 25, the paper that sold us on WMDs in Iraq and virtually convicted Wen Ho
Lee as a spy for the Chinese, weighed in with a front-page story on whether
vaccines cause autism.
Preposterous, the Times concluded, without dirtying its white-gloved hands by
actually having to say so. All the right people agree, and the Times quoted them
to persuasive effect. The headline said it all: "On Autism's Cause, It's Parents
vs. Research."
Those whose eyewitness experience convinces them otherwise were cast as
hysterical, homicidal scientific illiterates who talk to God through elderly
gentlemen and lock children in saunas in their crazed attempts to make money.
The right kind of people, apparently, do not include thousands of parents of
autistic children, or thousands of Amish, almost all of whom do not vaccinate
their children and do not seem to suffer much autism.
The parents say they have watched their children descend into autism after
receiving vaccinations. Doctors who treat the mostly unvaccinated Amish say they
have seen every other kind of disorder, but almost no autism.
Who cares, when you have "medical experts" and peer-reviewed "scientific
studies" galore? These people are credentialed, for Heaven's sake. They teach at
the schools and work at the agencies that count. They hew to the scientific
method. They are top-drawer -- and they say autism is not caused by vaccines.
Why, then, does the intellectual version of trailer trash -- untutored parents,
the frightfully out-of-its-depth "lay press," people without the right degrees,
the right pedigrees, the right publications, the right to an opinion -- keep
intruding on this turf?
Because the matter is nowhere near as cut-and-dried as the Times has portrayed
it. Absent, for example, were any of the studies that do point a finger at
vaccines and the mercury-based preservative thimerosal. Also missing were the
critiques of the science the Times relied on, critiques that may be wrong but
are certainly worth hearing.
Dismissed were all of the alternative treatments many parents say vastly
improved their children's condition. As the Times noted, no studies confirm that
assertion, but why not? Why not study them urgently and, if it is discovered
that removing mercury from autistic kids' systems really has some effect, what
are the implications of that?
Nor was there an acknowledgement that, although the experts maintain there is no
link, they have never -- never -- studied the most obvious population: the
unvaccinated. All they would need to do is count the number of unvaccinated
children with autism and compare that ratio to the rest of society.
If the experts had done this, that issue could have been taken off the table by
now. Instead, the real debate is stuck at the starting gate. Health officials at
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say they do not even know if
autism has increased in the past decade, although they have had 10 years to
figure it out.
I am sure the Times will be very sorry if it finds its editors were in error
about the subject and condescending to the parents of autistic children. We can
see the Editor's Note now, modeled on "The Times and Wen Ho Lee":
Headlined "The Times, Vaccines and Autism," the editors admit "that our
dismissal of the theory was premature and relied too heavily on epidemiological
studies that proved to be flawed and that we did not review independently.
Worse, we undervalued the eyewitness accounts of parents who watched their
children disappear into autism after vaccinations."
The worst part is the Times probably will make the same mistake again on some
other important issue -- unless it fixes its fatal flaw of comfortable
certainty, otherwise known as arrogance or, in the terminology of the Greek
tragedy this is, hubris.
Offering alms to the autistic in two or three years really will not suffice. The
New York Times -- plus ABC, NBC and many others, for that matter -- needs to
join the rest of us who are thinking for ourselves and grappling with whether
vaccines -- the greatest public-health achievement of all time -- inadvertently
triggered a disaster for a minority of families.
Getting back to our original theme, the problem with the Times is
establishmentarianism, "the doctrine of supporting the social or political
establishment," as wordreference.com describes it. Those who diss that
establishment encounter another layer of rejection:
antidisestablishmentarianism. At last, a practical use for that word!
Until the simple question of what causes autism is clearly established, a lot of
people touched by the condition just will not shut up, whether that distresses
the enforcers of the longest word in the English language or not.
This ongoing series on the roots and rise of autism welcomes reader comment.
E-mail:
dolmsted@upi.com