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BMJ Sued in Texas over Autism Research Article
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Medpagetoday.com REPORTS HERE that "the controversial Andrew Wakefield, MBBS, whose now largely discredited research ignited the vaccine-autism furor, has filed a defamation suit in a Texas court against BMJ, its editor, and an investigative journalist over a series of articles published last January."

These articles … as well as commentaries by the journal's editor ... slammed a now-infamous 1998 paper in The Lancet that suggested childhood MMR (measles-mumps-rubella) vaccinations had caused autism-like symptoms in 12 children."

"The Lancet had formally retracted the paper in February 2010 -- most of its 12 co-authors had repudiated it long before -- and the U.K.'s medical regulatory authority subsequently stripped Wakefield of his license to practice, finding that he had been intentionally dishonest and misleading."

"In the lawsuit filed in his adopted hometown of Austin, Texas, Wakefield called the BMJ articles 'unfair, incorrect, inaccurate, and unjust.'" Further, the suit charges, the articles "were and are false and written and published with actual malice and intended to cause damage to Dr. Wakefield's reputation and work ... and to permanently impair his reputation and livelihood."

"It also asserts that, when the articles were published, BMJ failed to disclose that it had "received significant revenue from the very vaccine manufacturers whose products need further investigation." Months later, the journal acknowledged that this should have been noted when the articles appeared."

The "BMJ also ridiculed Wakefield's choice of a Texas court in bringing the suit, rather than 'in London, as might be expected as it concerns a predominantly English publication.' The suit cited the 'Texas Long-Arm Statute' as justification for the venue, insofar as BMJ"direct[s] a significant and regular flow of publications, including periodicals, journals, articles, subscriptions, and electronic media to institutional and individual residents of this state."

 
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Original clinical study reports, which contain far more detail than published randomized trials, should be made available to independent researchers seeking to verify efficacy and safety claims.

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