December 2004
see also:
Letter from Barbara Loe Fisher to "60 Minutes"
NVIC battles biased reported on '60 Minutes'
The Oct. 20, 2004,
edition of CBS News' "60 Minutes" aimed its big guns at parents who question
the safety and effectiveness of vaccines and the National Vaccine
Information Center (NVIC), an organization that provides the "other side of
the story" on the controversial medicines.
Correspondent Dan
Rather interviewed several medical doctors during the show, both of whom
said that there is scientific evidence of vaccine safety. The MDs claimed
that the decision not to vaccinate children was putting society at risk. The
report noted that a research paper published in The Lancet was later
"disavowed" by that journal because the researcher supposedly had financial
ties to attorneys who were planning to sue vaccine makers. However, no
mention was made of the fact that countless medical research projects are
funded by pharmaceutical companies that stand to make billions of dollars in
profit from their drugs and vaccines.
Barbara Loe Fisher,
co‑founder and president of the NVIC, was interviewed on the program and
demonstrated her dedication as well as courage by stating: "The mass use of
multiple vaccines in early childhood to prevent all infections is the
biggest medical experiment that has ever been conducted on the human race.
And I think the jury is still out as to whether or not it will be medical
science's greatest achievement, or its most tragic failure."
After the episode
aired, Fisher wrote a letter to the producers of "60 Minutes," berating them
for their biased and inaccurate reporting. Among the most blatant of their
errors of omission was a failure to tell viewers that the doctor they touted
as their most respected vaccine "expert" was in reality a childhood vaccine
patent holder and paid consultant to Merck, the drug company ‑‑ one of the
largest childhood vaccine manufacturers.
Fisher, who co‑authored
"DPT: A Shot in the Dark," was the recipient of the 1999 World Chiropractic
Alliance "Humanitarian of the Year" award, in recognition of her struggle to
alert the public to the potential risks of vaccines.
She has served on the
National Vaccine Advisory Committee, is a member of the Vaccine Safety Forum
at the Institute of Medicine, and is on the editorial board of the
Journal of Vertebral Subluxation Research.
As a leading
spokesperson for the anti‑vaccine movement, Fisher has appeared on hundreds
of radio and television programs, including "The Today Show," "CBS Evening
News" and "Nightline."