Formation | January 1994 |
---|---|
Founder | Jackie Fletcher |
Purpose | Anti-vaccine advocacy |
Website | http://www.jabs.org.uk/ |
JABS (short for Justice, Awareness and Basic Support) is a British pressure group launched in Wigan in January 1994.[1] Beginning as a support group for the parents of children they claim became ill after the MMR vaccine (which they claim gave their children epilepsy, brain damage or autism – see: MMR vaccine and autism), the group is currently against all forms of vaccination.
The group began as a support group after Jackie Fletcher placed an advert in the newspaper to find parents whose children became ill after their first MMR vaccine after her child was diagnosed with epilepsy ten days after he received an MMR vaccination.[2] According to a pro-JABS article published by Private Eye, "30 families from a small community responded" originally, and by 2002 over two thousand families had been in contact.[3]
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tag[5] Alongside the earlier U.S.-based National Vaccine Information Center, it has been described as "instrumental" in "misinforming the public, misdirecting health resources, engendering spurious controversy, and facilitating declining vaccination rates to levels below those needed for 'herd immunity' in some regions by way of their emotional pleas".[6] JABS founder Jackie Fletcher says the group is not anti-vaccine, but seeks greater information and compensation for alleged vaccine side-effects.[7]
The group currently has a Facebook page[8] and operates an online message board, JABSforum.[9]
A solicitor for the group, Richard Barr, began acting for JABS shortly after its formation. He applied for legal aid to fund clinical studies into associations between the vaccine and the alleged side-effects claimed by JABS. He formed a partnership with Andrew Wakefield in 1996, who was paid £150 per hour by the law firm. The pair were awarded £55,000 by the Legal Aid Board to start their research. JABS referred children to Wakefield, and Wakefield admitted several children of JABS parents to the Royal Free Hospital for tests in 1996.[2][10]
Barr also paid a substantial sum to then-doctor Wakefield two years before his now-retracted 1998 Lancet report, urging Wakefield to discredit the MMR vaccine.[10] Brian Deer has described this partnership as "the foundation of the vaccine crisis, both in Britain and throughout the world".[11]
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Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JABS.
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