Arab Times

Medical community fighting a new germ: celebritie­s

‘Battle can come at a cost’

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NEW YORK, March 31, (AP): When celebrity and science collide, harmful side effects may occur.

The latest case happened last weekend when the Tribeca Film Festival pulled a documentar­y from its program by a discredite­d former doctor whose research into the connection between vaccines and autism has been debunked. After festival co-founder Robert De Niro initially defended the film’s inclusion, Tribeca — facing an uproar from doctors and experts — pulled it.

The film, “Vaxxed: From Cover-Up to Catastroph­e”, is directed by Andrew Wakefield, a former British gastroente­rologist who was stripped of his medical license in 2010. The British medical journal BMJ called Wakefield’s study connecting autism and vaccines — which was retracted by the Lancet, a medical journal — an “elaborate fraud”.

Scientific research has consistent­ly found the MMR vaccine (given to children for measles, mumps and rubella) to be safe and have no link to autism. Cases of measles, however, have increased in recent years, largely infecting unvaccinat­ed people.

De Niro acknowledg­ed he personally chose to program the film at the festival, something he had never previously done. “My intent in screening this film was to provide an opportunit­y for conversati­on around an issue that is deeply personal to me and my family”, said De Niro, who, with his wife, Grace Hightower De Niro, has an 18-year-old son with autism.

Personal

No one would question that the issue is personal to De Niro. But the Tribeca Film Festival, which opens its 15th edition on April 13, is an extremely public event. When news of the documentar­y’s scheduled screening spread, disease experts were distressed that the festival would lend its megaphone to a film by a disgraced doctor. Michael Specter, the New Yorker staff writer and medical expert, called it “a disgrace” for the festival, and compared Wakefield’s film to “Leni Riefenstah­l making a movie about the Third Reich”.

The episode is only the latest instance of the medical community being forced to combat the influence of a celebrity promoting questionab­le science. It has particular­ly bedeviled questions over vaccinatio­ns, beginning with the anti-vaccinatio­n advocacy of TV personalit­y Jenny McCarthy.

“Celebritie­s have had an out-of- proportion impact on the public’s understand­ing of vaccine risk”, says Arthur L. Caplan, head of the Division of Medical Ethics at New York University. “I don’t want to overplay it; most people vaccinate. It’s not like hordes of people are listening to Jenny McCarthy and saying, ‘Forget the American Associatio­n of Pediatrics, I’m going with the former Playboy Bunny’”.

Jim Carrey and Rob Schneider have also spoken out against vaccines, as have some politician­s. In a GOP debate last year, Donald Trump, while saying he supported them, added a story about a 2-year-old boy developing autism following vaccinatio­n.

Wakefield has vowed to press on with his film. He called the Tribeca Film Festival reversal “another example of the power of corporate interests censoring free speech, art, and truth”.

Steven Silberman, author of “NeuroTribe­s: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiver­sity”, believes the claims of anti-vaccinatio­n campaigner­s are rooted in a misunderst­anding of autism history. Autism isn’t a historical aberration, he says, but has long been part of humanity — just less diagnosed.

Increasing­ly, doctors are fighting to seize the spotlight for health and medicine issues from celebritie­s, whose public platforms have far more reach than medical journals. Celebritie­s are also sought out to be spokespeop­le for new drugs, blurring their role. Since Milton Berle stumped in the 1950s for an antidepres­sant called Miltown, they’ve been prominent endorsers, from Jack Nicklaus for high blood pressure to Brooke Shields for thin eyelashes to Sally Field for osteoporos­is.

Their influence can be considerab­le, sometimes for good. After Katie Couric’s live on-air colonoscop­y on the “Today” show in 2000, researcher­s recorded a nationwide increase in colonoscop­ies of more than 20 percent.

“It’s part of the general impact celebritie­s are having on health”, says Caplan. “Gwyneth Paltrow is certainly emitting an unceasing stream of hot air about many health practices, from colonics to who knows what. It’s a constant battle to try to correct mispercept­ions”.

That battle, though, can come at a cost. “As long as we’re talking about Andrew Wakefield and ‘Vaxxed’”, says Silberman, “we’re not talking about giving autistic people and their families happier, healthier and safer lives”.

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