Physicians
for Informed Consent (PIC) is an antivaccine group of physicians that
specializes in discouraging vaccination, framing their objectives –misleadingly
– as being
a matter of “informed
consent”. Despite being a fringe group
(like the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS) or America’s Frontline Doctors – there’s quite a bit of overlap
in terms of membership), however, PIC is rather influential, insofar as many of
its members are, in fact, physicians and medical professionals – in 2019, they
almost got Peter Gøtzsche to speak at one of their antivaccine symposia before he recognized the damage it
would do to his already frayed credibility.
As for
“informed consent”, the PIC means that parents should
be exposed to antivaccine misinformation that overstates the risks and
underestimate the effectiveness of vaccines, in order to ensure that they are
properly frightened into making the bad choice that PIC wants them to make. For
instance, in their educational materials on the MMR vaccine, the PIC states
that “the chance of dying from
measles was 1 in 10,000 or 0.01%”, which is less than a tenth of the actual rate established by thorough research – so how did PIC arrive at their
figure? By assuming that “nearly 90% of measles cases are benign and
therefore not reported to the CDC”. They do not cite sources … but even if
they are right, the actual number of kids dying would remain unchanged –
if the official numbers were 1 000 000 kids getting the measles
during an outbreak and 2000 dying, the PIC would jump in and say that in
reality, 10 000 000 kids got measles of which 2000 died: measles
is just even more contagious and widespread than expected and the risk of death
or hospitalization for an unvaccinated kid remains the same … which to a person
with normal reasoning skill would be all the more reason to get the
vaccine. PIC does not embody reasoning skills. For the record, there has been
no reported death due to the MMR vaccine – which would also spare you a
long list of serious and common complications from measles. PIC, by contrast, supplies documents indicating a range of mythical risks associated with the MMR vaccine (such as claiming that it leads to seizures)
harvested from various conspiracy outlets that they, for good measure, say are
“peer-reviewed”, meaning presumably that more than one antivaccine
activist has endorsed the source (their sources are not independently
peer reviewed or published in any kind of reputable journal).
Greg Glaser
is the general counsel for PIC – Glaser is, as such, a “vaccine rights
attorney” (not a medical professional) in California with a litigation and
transactional law background. And as Glaser tells his backstory: “After my
daughter’s first round of injections, the experience forced me to open my eyes
and actually research the matter. I found a suspicious list of vaccine ingredients, and an absolute certainty of
widespread, under-reported vaccine injury across our population [a misleading claim at best]. Seeing my nephew suffer after
the MMR vaccine also prompted me to research holistic ways to detox from
vaccine injury.” Yes, he diagnosed his own child with vaccine injury (though he is notably vague about
it). And yes, he thinks you can, and should, do a vaccine detox. A holistic detox. You should not.
Otherwise,
Glaser’s website is stuffed with the usual antivaccine (and Covid)
pseudoscience, misinformation and conspiracy theories you usually find on
antivaccine sites and which Glaser has found in sources like the National
Vaccine Information Center and other members of PIC. He was also involved in lawsuits against California’s
school vaccine mandate, and with fellow antivaccine lawyer Ray Flores, he filed
a lawsuit on behalf of Joy Garner, leader of the antivaccine group ‘The Control
Group’ (the name is supposed to convey the delusion that all vaccines are
experimental and that the unvaccinated
constitute the control group), against then-president Trump since he was
allegedly ultimately responsible for the California school vaccine mandate that
Garner, Glaser and Flores thought was unconstitutional, a case that must be
considered baseless and delusional – as confirmed by the courts – even by antivaccine conspiracy theory
standards.
Indeed, in
2020, Glaser and Garner were also behind a “survey” called ‘The
Control Group Pilot Study’ designed to “prove” that the unvaccinated
are healthier than vaccinated people (they aren’t), which even antivaxx
organizations seem to have recognized as being pretty worthless – it is
discussed here). Basically, the “study” was
a (yet another) survey advertised on various anti-vaccine
sites (you had to request a paper version) asking people frequenting those sites
simply about what chronic diseases they have and their vaccination status –
Glaser and Garner didn’t even control for age, weight, or any other demographic
factors. That’s it … except for some random-capitalization rantings about the
evils of Common Core mathematics, the corruption of science, and the VAERS database. (Garner’s defense against
potential criticism concerning lack of scientific rigor is worth quoting: “I
see some people think the survey’s not ‘scientific’ enough. But the real point
here is: According to WHO’s definition of ‘science’ do you claim this? If
you’re looking for The Control Group to fall in lock-step with the sort of
‘science’ pharma has to offer you, we’re not you’re huckleberry” – in
particular, the study is “NOT being conducted for publication in a
pharma-funded medical journal”, it “IS being conducted based upon the
Federal Rules of Evidence for submission under a particular branch of law”
and though it “is possible that the results could be skewed by some people,
but this happens with ALL surveys [yes … but good science at least attempts
to reduce bias], and we already have so many participants willing to identify
themselves, (and even testify in court) that we will be able to show these
affects are only minimal in our study” [that’s … not the issue]; also, they
were “using PAPER hard-copy documents, and those are REALLY tough to fake”.)
As for
Glaser’s group, PIC, we have encountered them before through the group’s
founder Shira Miller, who, although she is educated as
a physician, currently runs an Integrative Center for Health and Wellness specializing in “anti-aging” medicine and holistic “medicine”.
But it might be informative to use this opportunity to do a relatively
comprehensive rundown of their leadership group, which in addition to Glaser
and Miller includes:
- Douglas Mackenzie, MD, Director and
Treasurer (California), a plastic surgeon and member of AAPS (he’ll get his own entry later)
- Cammy Benton, Founding Director (North
Carolina)
- Yoshi Rahm, DO (California), who is,
predictably, also “board certified in holistic and integrative medicine”.
- Joyce Drayton, MD (Georgia)
- Paul Thomas, MD (though note), Founding Member (and one of the
movers and shakers in the antivaccine movement) (Oregon)
- Ilona French, Community Director
(California), who has no discernible medical background but was ostensibly
associate editor of a medical journal, Dialysis and Transplantation, for
which the closest google hit is an entry on Jeffrey Beall’s list of potentially predatory journals
- Semi-legendary antivaccine champion
Gary Goldman, “independent computer
scientist” and Computer Science Advisor (Mississippi)
- Legendary antivaccine activist and
“false authority” Tetyana Obukhanych
- Jane Orient, MD (Arizona). No, seriously!
- Tiffany Baer, MD (California),
well-known in California antivaxx circles for being willing to write medical vaccine
exemptions (she works at the same clinic as Kelly Sutton, see below)
- Michelle Veneziano, DO, Founding
Member (California), who has long questioned the safety of vaccines: When
investigating, she “discovered many studies that questioned their safety; I also found that these studies
are not easily located in the medical literature.” Well, there is a good reason for that; people like Veneziano go for “there must be a conspiracy afoot”
instead.
- Antivaccine movement leader and pseudoscience producer Christopher Shaw, PhD neurobiology (Canada)
- Tawny Buettner, Nurse Advisor
(California) and organizer of a 2021 rally outside her employer Rady Children’s Hospital to protest a state mandate
requiring health workers to be vaccinated against COVID if they are to work with vulnerable groups
- Robert Krakow, P.D., Advisor (New York)
- Sandy Reider, MD (Vermont)
- Philip Incao, MD (Colorado)
(deceased), a germ theory denialist who was also into HIV denialism.
- Kenneth Stoller, MD, Hyperbarics Advisor (!) (New Mexico). One of
the practitioners placed under investigation by the Medical Board of California for writing bogus medical vaccine
exemptions in 2019.
- Jacques Simon, Esq. (New York),
another lawyer, and one who apparently likes to advise doctors on how to write
medical vaccine exemptions in California.
- Nikki Leeds, Outreach Director
(California); no discernible medical background
- Edmond Sarraf, MD, Founding Member
(California), affiliated with the Southern California Integrative Wellness Center and who has “an open
philosophy about vaccines”
- LeTrinh Hoang, DO, Founding Member
(California), who runs a practice offering “holistic, integrative pediatrics” combining homeopathy and osteopathy, and is coauthor with Lauren Feder of The Parents' Concise Guide
to Childhood Vaccinations (not recommended)
- Pejman Katiraei, DO, Founding Member
(California)
- Kelly Sutton, MD and specialist in
anthroposophic “medicine”, Founding Member (California). One
of the practitioners placed under investigation by the Medical Board of
California for writing bogus medical vaccine
exemptions in 2019.
- Stuart Fischbein, MD, Founding
Member (California), who has had some troubles with the California Medical Board
- Debra Gambrell,
DO, Founding Member (California), another anthroposophical medicine practitioner and star of Ty Bollinger’s antivaccine conspiracy propaganda series The Truth About Vaccines.
- Jonathan Wright, MD and holistic practitioner
(quack), Founding Member (Washington)
- Robert Rowen, MD (and “integrative physician”), Founding Member (California)
- Bob Sears, MD, Founding Member (California).
One of the practitioners placed under investigation by the Medical Board of California for writing bogus medical vaccine
exemptions in 2019.
Diagnosis:
Yet another group that could, at first glance, come across as consisting of
people with something worthwhile to say … but you don’t need to dig much to
start to discern the insanity of the antivaccine clown troupe that is the PIC. They
undeniably have some influence, however.