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Media Watch - February 2002
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Media Watch
with Mary Aspinwall, R.S Hom, P.C. Hom.
Since I last wrote there has been one minor and then one major
media feeding frenzy that has touched on our little realm.
The first followed the death of an asthma
sufferer, who had apparently been receiving homeopathic treatment.
The story, which emerged at the inquest, was picked up by
most Irish national papers. Their concerns, expressed here
by The Irish Times, centred on the lack of regulation:
“In Co Mayo, Jacqueline Alderslade died after an asthmatic
attack last July. It emerged at the inquest that she had written
in her diary that a homeopath had told her to stop the medication
for her condition, except for a Ventolin inhaler, while she
tried the alternative treatment.
The homeopath, Mineke Kamper, who failed to attend the inquest,
denied to gardaí that she had taken Alderslade off
the medication…
Experiences such as these highlight the urgent need for regulation
of the alternative- healthcare sector, to protect not only
consumers, but also responsible practitioners.
As a consumer, how do you know the person treating you alternatively
is genuine? How do you know it's not just a lot of hot air?
…Some alternative practitioners belong to voluntary
registers. The Irish Society of Homeopaths and the Irish Reflexologists'
Institute are among those who are attempting to regulate their
fields.
Lua McIlraith, who chairs the reflexology institute, wants
statutory regulation to be introduced as soon as possible,
so "we can be seen as upright, honest people who are
not in the business of killing people". ”
The new PR sub committee did a good damage limitation job.
In letters to all the papers they pointed out that Ms. Kamper
was not known to the Society and that the Society was actively
seeking statutory regulation of the profession to protect
the public. Sally Quinlan went on national radio to reiterate
this message. The frenzy was short-lived because the following
day a major child prostitution scandal broke and this was
immediately followed by the Budget. The inquest quickly became
yesterday’s news.
More recently, Breda Dooley (our PR consultant) contacted
The Examiner’s Feelgood supplement and they did a double
page spread. One side focussing on the Irish Society’s
desire for statutory registration and the other interviewing
John Files, a very obliging client of mine on his (and his
family’s) positive experience of being treated homeopathically.
These articles are very important if we are to maintain the,
generally very positive, image the public has of Homeopathy.
The second frenzy is one that will run and run. The Daily
Telegraph, noting Cherie Blair’s sympathetic feelings
towards thing alternative, wondered (on December 11) whether
Leo Blair, 18 months old, had received the combined measles,
mumps and rubella vaccination. She and her husband refused
to say yae or nae citing the little fellow’s right to
privacy.
Conservatives believed Cherie had given Leo single, rather
than combined, vaccines, whilst on holiday in France. Some
Tories sensed they were on to some classic Downing Street
hypocrisy. The Mail on Sunday speculated that Cherie and Tony
had been prejudiced against the jab due to a case of autism
elsewhere in the extended Blair family.
Whilst the Department of Health spouted reassuring noises
that MMR was entirely safe statistics showed that only 75%
of children had received the MMR jab twice by the recommended
age of five. This is 20% below the number needed for so-called
‘herd’ immunity.
On Sunday 3rd February BBC’s Panorama ran a documentary
called “MMR – Every Parent’s Choice”
which fatured the latest research by scientists, including
Andrew Wakefield. In the research Wakefield and his collaborators
report that they have found the measles virus in 83% of gut
samples from children with autism and bowels disorders but
only in 7% of children without these conditions. Wakefield
first publicly claimed MMR may not be safe in 1998, and recommended
the use of single vaccines. Since he voiced these safety concerns
the uptake of MMR has fallen dramatically.
He told Panorama: "You do not combine three live viruses
into one vaccine and assume that it is a benign process. "These
are viruses that are live, they are capable of establishing
long term infection and they are capable of producing long-term
adverse events."
Panorama invited people to post their comments on its website
following the show. One of those who tried to do so was Magda
Taylor, who has run a newletter called The Informed Parent
for many years.
Noting that many of the offerings posted were highly emotional
she e-mailed a detailed summary of the arguments against vaccination
including many rarely-quoted figures. Later she checked and
they had been removed.
The following day, she contacted BBC Radio 5 Live’s
phone-in programme on MMR with Nicky Campbell. Despite her
long experience in coherently arguing the demerits of vaccination
she was not contacted at any stage during the programme. In
contrast, Jackie Fletcher (who set up JABs following vaccine
damage to her own son) was on the programme throughout. Jackie
is an advocate of single vaccines.
It is curious that in this era of informed consent and seemingly
open debate that some animals’ airtime is more equal
than others!
©Mary Aspinwall
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