13-year
old Michelle Cedillo is at the
center of a court case pitting
thousands of families of children
with autism against the medical
establishment. While a number of
prestigious medical institutions say
there is no link between vaccines
and autism, the families believe
vaccines caused their children's
autism, and have taken their case to
court.
Theresa and Mike Cedillo, Michelle's
parents, believe the MMR vaccine,
which at the time contained a
mercury-based preservative,
drastically altered the course of
their daughter's development. Within
days of receiving the injection,
Michelle suffered from a high fever,
persistent vomiting and problems
with her digestion -- and also
stopped speaking and no longer
responded to her name.
Dr. Paul Offit,
chief of infectious diseases at the
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, claims the apparent
connection between vaccines and
autism is “nothing more than a sad
coincidence.”
But families who
believe vaccines can trigger autism
point to the case of 9-year-old
Hannah Poling; the U.S. government
conceded that vaccines
"significantly aggravated" her
underlying illness, predisposing her
to symptoms of autism.
The court heard
testimony in the Cedillo claim in
June of 2007. Testimony in other
test cases is scheduled for 2008.