Polly's pages (aka 'Donna Williams')

Ever the arty Autie

Autism, vaccination and primary immune deficiency

December25

here sml With a history of Primary Immune Deficiency and after 4 months with a lung infection (and on atibiotic number 4 at that point), the doc was waiting for me to get better to give me the pneumococcal and meningococcal vaccines.   These are both conditions are commonly caused by Haemophilus Influenzae, one of which is known as Hib.  Then on top of the ear, nose, lung infections I was fighting, I developed a severe throat infection.  It was hard to speak and painful to swallow and I felt like something was stuck in my throat.  I was so looking forward to going back to the doc the next day and with luck the latest results had come back and had finally isolated which bug it was.  I had pneumonia and the bug was Haemophilus Influenzae which was now also infecting my throat.

Haemophilus Influenzae is a bug that normally doesn’t effect adults.  They have mostly developed natural immunity to it.  In fact many people carry it, harmlessly.  But it does infect people with immune deficiency, the elderly, and Hib kills 5-10% of the children who can develop pneumonia or meningitis from it and leaves others severely brain injured.  I’m just relieved that most children are now vaccinated against it.

With vaccination fear so rampant, people are leaving many kids unvaccinated, especially autistic children.  I’m an autism consultant.  I work with kids and have worked with 100s of children with autism.  Being immune deficient I also am more susceptible to their bugs than most people and a number of times I had to stop working in special schools because I was getting a higher and higher viral load, infections and chronic fatigue kept flaring up.

But only 10-20% of children with autism may have significant primary immune deficiency (see studies by Gupta), so the other 80% may have no difficulty responding properly to vaccines which may save their lives.  A standard saliva swab for IgA levels in the children of families afraid of vaccination would help.  If their IgA levels are normal, chances are they’ll have healthy enough immunity to respond properly to vaccinations which may save them from life threatening bugs.  Then when and if their immunity tests in the normal range they should have no adverse reaction to vaccinations.

As someone with IgA deficiency (I’ve also had low white cells, now ok, and have low IgG and am treating D Deficiency) I would have had a problem developing immunity from vaccinations but equally I couldn’t develop immunity from catching bugs either. So the theory that someone like me would naturally develop resistance through exposure is a fallacy, a dangerous one.

And born in 1963 there weren’t vaccinations for Hib then, nor for measles or mumps and I caught the full blown version of measles and mumps when I was about 2. Did I develop natural immunity to measles after that?

In my 30s after treatment for immune deficiency  my immune system was recovering.  As a result bugs I’d been carrying began to flare up into symptoms as my white cells now recognised them.

Result: I developed fever, pustules everywhere, vomiting, nausea, diarrhea.  I was diagnosed with the measles.  Two others around me caught the virus, also diagnosed as measles.  Then my measles went away and came back up six weeks later.  Again, to the doctors dismay, measles was again diagnosed.  These flare ups occured every 6 weeks for the next 10 months.  At first the doctor thought this was impossible.  People only get measles once.  Then we learned, yes, most do.  But without a healthy working immune system I had walked around carrying measles for 36 years, passing the virus to unvaccinated adults and children along the way.  Without enough immunoglobulins you can’t signal your white cells properly (if you have enough in the first place) so you don’t develop immunity to the bugs you’ve had and you don’t fully fight off the one’s you have.  You can catch the same one over and over and have flare ups of the one’s you have.

At 37 with the help of immune specialists I got normal white cell count and at 38 I got normal IgA levels.  I stayed healthy until this year, aged 46.  I always had a particular soft spot for those kids I worked with who also tested as having Primary Immune Deficiency.  I knew their tough road ahead and how important it was that others around them pass them as few life threatening bugs as possible.  I was glad we had vaccinated children at their schools because they themselves may not respond well to vaccines so living in a vaccinated world would help them live fuller, healthier lives.

There is no reason for healthy children with no history of recurrent infections and no family history of immune disorders to go unvaccinated.  It makes for a dangerous world for those of us who can’t develop natural immunity and who will pass bugs to unvaccinated populations.  There is also every reason to test early for Primary Immune Deficiency and put in place the programs to help those with it stay as healthy as possible.

Donna Williams, Dip Ed, BA Hons.
Author, artist, singer-songwriter, screenwriter.
Autism consultant and public speaker.

http://www.myspace.com/nobodynowherethefilm
http://www.donnawilliams.net
http://www.aspinauts.com

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