Shaken Baby Syndrome (SBS) often a false diagnosis really caused by vaccinesMonday, June 02, 2014 by: J. D. Heyes
Tags: shaken baby syndrome, false diagnosis, vaccines (NaturalNews) A woman who had no prior history of violence was released from prison in April after serving nearly half of a 20-year sentence for the murder of an infant in her care.
Jennifer Del Prete was a daycare worker who maintained her innocence throughout her entire ordeal. She was convicted of shaking four-month-old Isabella Zielinski after the child fell unconscious in her care. She never woke up from a coma and died in the hospital 10 months later.
During Del Prete's trial, prosecutors insisted that it was a classic case of violent and intentional shaken baby syndrome (which is now officially known as "abusive head trauma"), and they had the medical experts to "prove it."
'Groundbreaking' rulingNow, however, U.S. District Judge Matthew Kennelly, who ordered Del Prete's release, is not convinced of the shaken-baby verdict, or even that the typical symptoms that are used to diagnose it are sufficient to prove a person guilty of child abuse or murder.
As reported by the website
Care2.com:
In a comprehensive 97-page opinion, Kennelly draws attention to the controversial science behind SBS, going so far as to suggest: "a claim of shaken baby syndrome is more an article of faith than a proposition of science."Kennelly's ruling is being considered groundbreaking in some circles, because for the first time it condemns the shaken-baby diagnosis, which has been upheld in scores of courtrooms and has been used to convict hundreds of people on charges of child abuse and murder, as unreliable.
Since the 1990s, the website reports, more than 1,000 cases of
shaken baby syndrome (SBS) have been heard in court. Between half and three-quarters of these cases have relied on an SBS-associated triad of symptoms as the only medical evidence "proving" the crime.
The triad -- subdural hemorrhage (or bleeding surrounding the brain), retinal hemorrhage and swelling of the brain -- has been used by prosecutors as irrefutable evidence that determines almost all important aspects of the case, such as how the child died (from being shaken violently), who did the shaking (the last person with the child) and what the state of mind was for the murder at the time (angry and intentional).
Vaccine reactions can mimic SBS symptomsAdditional physical symptoms like bruises and cuts that you might expect to see in cases of very extreme child abuse mostly did not need to be present to convict someone of SBS. It also was not necessary for any witnesses to have been present. So, the result was an overwhelming faith in the triad, in which it alone was powerful enough to determine a person's guilt:
This is troubling for several reasons, not the least of which is that the science behind the triad is coming into question. Many doctors now acknowledge that the same symptoms that once were used to definitively conclude that SBS had taken place could actually be caused by other conditions, such as infections or bleeding disorders. There have also been findings that dispute that the assumption the shaking need necessarily be violent and intentional for these symptoms to take place.And some experts believe that
adverse reactions to vaccines, which can cause symptoms similar to SBS, are actually responsible for the deaths of some babies.
"Del Prete's case can teach us about much more than the controversy surrounding SBS,"
Care2.org says. "It shows us how crucial it is that evidence not be based on one idea alone. Theory is important, but over-reliance on it can be a bit like trusting a single witness when the rest of them have nothing incriminating to say. We need to be comprehensive in our trials, otherwise 'innocent until proven guilty' loses its meaning."
For more information and breaking news regarding the dangers of vaccines, visit
Vaccines.NaturalNews.com.
http://www.naturalnews.com/045402_shaken_baby_syndrome_false_diagnosis_vaccines.html