AUTOMATIC COMPUTER TRANSLATION Clifford Miller
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World Autism Pandemic



The world autism pandemic affects only children.   As many as 1 in 86 children are being diagnosed with autism: Baird et Al Prevalence of disorders of the autism spectrum in a population cohort of children in South Thames: the Special Needs and Autism Project (SNAP);
Lancet 2006;368:210 –15.

It is not happening just in the USA and UK but is international, eg:-
"More Australian children will be diagnosed with autism this year than diabetes, cancer and AIDS combined. The figures are alarming, with around 1 in 160 (or 125,000 individuals) living with the behavioural disorder.Reporter: Karen Tan Living With Autism - Australian TV - Channel 9
It affects children born around the introduction of aggressive new mid-1980's child vaccination schedules. 

To deny vaccines are involved pandemic denialists must:-
  • deny there is an autism pandemic in children
  • claim here are proportionately just as many adults with autism as children
But these adults do not exist.  Not only is there no proof they do, there is proof they do not.  Read on.  And if anyone claims to you that the World Autism Pandemic is not real but results from "better diagnosis" and "greater awareness" send them the link to this page and then demand they provide credible scientific proof.  They will fail.  It also does not exist.  See here also for why.



Autism pandemic denialists have to claim there are proportionately just as many adults with autism as children if they are to claim there is no pandemic.  If autism has always been at the present levels and has nothing to do with the heavily increased vaccination schedules since the mid 1980's, then check this out:-

PHLS Chart

Data source "Audit of Services for People with Autistic Spectrum Disorders" - Public Health Institute for Scotland for the Scottish Executive. 

This shows:-
  • the rise in autism is contemporaneous with the large increase in vaccinations in the UK occurring in and since 1988
  • only children born since the mid 1980s have been affected, not adults
  • our governments cannot find all the autistic adults to equal the numbers of children born since the mid 1980s who now have autism
The reality is that these adults just do not exist and for any scientist applying Occam's Razor, that is the preferred explanation.  But here is the Public Health Institute for Scotland's unscientific explanation for why they could not find the adults (my emphasis):-
"Table 6A shows a total of 645 adults diagnosed with autistic spectrum disorders in Scotland. We know that this is a significant underestimate of the total number of adults with autistic spectrum disorders from the comments received with these figures and also the large amount of missing data in this table."
The reality is that these adults just do not exist. 

"Comments received" is what government scientists are always saying is valueless unscientific "anecdotal evidence".  And this is exactly the kind of thing you would expect the Public Health Institute of Scotland to say bearing in mind they could not possibly admit it was the fault of government health authorities.  And of course, the information was also supplied by health and local authority officials.  Not particularly independent when it comes to explaining it all away, but the data is impressive to prove the point.



  Back
Borat's Cousin Hired in British Government's Desperate Bid to Find Adult Autistics

Autism pandemic denialists have to claim there are just as many adults with autism as children if they are to claim there is no pandemic. 

So the British Department of Health has hired Borat actor and comedian, Sacha Baron-Cohen's cousin to try to track down an alleged 500,000 adult autistics in the UK needing 24/7 care and their alleged 500,000 full time carers: Department of Health announces adult autism strategy - Thursday, 8-May-2008.

The claims to there being currently 500,000 adult autistics and 500,000 full time carers in the UK are obviously nonsense.  These adults do not exist (for proof see more below).  But they will in future if nothing is doneRegrettably, these claims also come from the UK's National Autistic Society who clearly seem to be busy raising funds to help people who do not exist: Shame of UK's National Autistic Society

The Borat comedian's psychologist cousin, Professor Simon Baron-Cohen is a bit of a joker himself.  He will need a sense of humour for the thankless task before him.  Prof Simon once infamously and tastelessly claimed in an interview with Richard Dawkins of the UK's Independent on Sunday newspaper that "it has never been a better time to have autism"  [What are you optimistic about? The Independent on Sunday, 21 January 2007].

The media reports of Thursday 8th May 2008 stated:
"Care services Minister Ivan Lewis today announced £500,000 for Government research into the numbers of adults with autism and their specific transitions needs. This prevalence study will inform the first ever Government strategy on adults with autism and Asperger's syndrome, due to be published next year."

Prof Simon's task will be thankless because we already know how many adults there are who are not in employment because they care for another.  According to figures from the UK's Office for National Statistics the total number of adults caring for a dependent adult or relative in September 2001 was 326,000.  And that means full-time carers for any reason, whether autism or anything else.   The figures
were collected in the UK's 2001 census, which UK citizens are obliged by law to respond to.

It will be interesting to see what the result of Prof Simon's efforts will be when his team reports in 2009 and whether Professor Simon can deliver the non existent adults which the British government needs to prove autism is not caused by our Department of Health's extremely aggressive and unnecessary child vaccine programmes

Professor Simon has a similar pedigree to Eric Fombonne, both having spent time with Professor Sir Michael Rutter's Institute of Psychiatry, at Kings College London: [Professor Sir Michael Rutter & The Drug Industry Connections.]  Psychiatry is the least successful branch of medicine in history.


And it looks like the UK's National Autistic Society might have to downgrade their fundraising activities by a few hundred percent or risk having to answer the question "Well, what the hell do we spend all this on then"?  But maybe they will be able to find some use for the money. 

The official figures are set out in Table 1 of "The economically inactive who look after the family or home" By Guy Weir, Labour Market Division, Office for National Statistics.  Table 1 is headed "Numbers of economically inactive working-age people looking after the family/home, by sex and reason for inactivity; United Kingdom".






The following emailed letter to The Sunday Times shows just how shameful the position of the UK's National Autistic Society is:-

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: A life of constant caring - Times Online - May 4, 2008 - Charlotte Moore
Date: Sun, 04 May 2008 09:49:48 +0100
From: Clifford G. Miller
To: Sunday Times Letters, Charlotte Moore

To     Letters Editor, The Sunday Times
          & Charlotte Moore


Dear Editor and Charlotte,

A life of constant caring - May 4, 2008  -
Autistic children grow up into autistic adults – and they still need looking after 24/7

Your article will harm efforts to get our political leaders to address the pandemic of autism in the UK and worldwide.  It is a new problem that affects only children.  There is no shred of credible scientific or other evidence to support your claims to there being "500,000 autistic adults" in this country needing 24 hour care and "their ageing carers".  These adults do not exist. The half a million figure you quote is from the National Autistic Society.  I corresponded with Benet Middleton the Communications Director of the NAS about these figures (more below). 


There is no doubt whatsoever that if the autism pandemic is allowed to continue, and we do nothing to stop it, we will have one million autistic adults and their carers taken out of the economy.  And we can stop it.  Regrettably, articles like yours ensure we will do nothing by pretending this new international disaster has always existed. 

Your article is itself evidence this is a new problem.  It is all about autistic children maturing into autistic adults.  We did not see articles like yours 10 or 20 years ago because this new problem did not exist then   And if it did exist then, we would not see articles like yours now because it would not be news. 

Simple financial calculations of the cost to the nation show that your suggestion that currently there are one million or more more adults taken out of the economy because of autism is nonsense.  But it is nonsense with very serious implications.

NAS' Benet Middleton confirmed to me the 500,000 figures are based on a recent, 2006, paper by Professor Gillian Baird and her team.  That paper is all about children.  It has nothing whatsoever to do with adults, which is evidence in itself showing this is a new problem.  The Baird paper records that 1 in 86 children (ie 116 in 10,000) are now on the autistic spectrum. 


And there is credible evidence adults do not exist in the numbers claimed.  Middleton confirmed "There have been no prevalence studies on adults at all".  If this country had half a million autistic adults needing 24 hour care daily from another half a million adult carers, we would all know about it.  We would have numerous studies.  It would be a national disaster and we would be paying for it heavily in the welfare state.  Not only do these half a million adults and their carers not exist, your article and the Wardle case and other reported cases are all about children.

The future financial burden on the NHS and welfare state will be substantial.  We are already seeing the burden coming through in school budgets with the extra provision.  We have also seen Dame Mary Warnock's recent volte face over reintroducing special schools after advocating pupils with disabilities attending mainstream schools.  The volte face is significant because, according to Dame Mary, New Labour's commitment to ensuring as many children as possible were educated in a mainstream school has become something of a "mantra": Richard Garner: A balance has to be struck for each child; The Independent Tuesday, 12 October 2004.

If the media in this country continue to publish articles like yours and fail to address the problem, we will never alert the public and our political leaders to this urgent and serious problem and we will fail to ensure the causes are swiftly and effectively identified and dealt with. 

The media in the US have started to publish some information, as you can see here Vaccines-to-Autism - The Taming of the British Media.  Despite the repeated official denials, there is ample evidence of a causal link to show the large numbers of childhood vaccinations introduced in the mid 1980s.  James Wardle featured in your story was 22.  He was born in 1986 and would have received the Urabe mumps strain of MMR vaccine when it was introduced in October 1988.   When is the British media going to wake up to this extremely serious problem?  It is asleep at the wheel.

What the NAS have done is to pretend there are also 1 in 86 adults with autism and that is how they have calculated their figure.  Exaggerations of this kind of thing may enable them to avoid getting involved in the vaccines-to-autism controversy, to raise money by making their cause sound important and to raise money for people who do not exist, but it does not help the pandemic of children with autism.  By joining the ranks of the autism pandemic denialists, the NAS are letting the children and their families down very badly.

Sincerely,

____________________________________________________________________________
From: Mr Miller,
50 Burnhill Road, Beckenham, Kent BR3 3LA, England
Tel: + 44 (0) 20 8663 0044 Fax: + 44 (0) 20 8663 0011
____________________________________________________________________________



In the following edited exchanges of emails with autism pandemic denialist Professor Bennett Leventhal of Chicago, Illinois, USA, in April 2008 I demonstrate with reference to formal published medical literature:

The email exchanges are:-



-------- Original Message --------                       To Top of Page    -  To Bennett Leventhal
Subject: RE: World Autism Pandemic
Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2008 17:34:23 +0100
From: Clifford G. Miller
To: Leventhal Bennett
CC: Lisa Blakemore-Brown


 
Dear Professor Leventhal,

The World Autism Pandemic

Thank you for your email (text below).  I am obliged to you for your response and apologise for overlooking your professorial rank.

Proof in science requires facts and reliable evidence.  Conjecture, argument or opinion are not acceptable substitutes.  Consider this exchange a scientific peer review of your claims. 

My challenge to you is to produce credible scientific evidence to prove your assertions.  You produce none.  You are the person making the assertions so it is incumbent on you to produce the evidence.  As I already stated, there is none.  And as I have already pointed out, you have claimed regarding the causes of autism that you "will pursue that goal through the careful study of the data." so you should already have that data.

Regarding your points in your email:-

........ 

3.     None of the papers you cite assist in proving any of your assertions.  ......

..... Sadly, also, you are mistaken regarding the fundamental issues.  To test your theories we must establish the hypotheses.  One of your hypotheses is that prevalence has always been 1 in 150.  Another hypothesis is that reported increases in prevalence are due to "clinical blindness". 

Further, your claims that a) "the fundamental question is if incidence has changed" and b) there is "no evidence of that" are erroneous bases from which to start.  They are also incorrect claims in themselves.  I will explain further below.

First let me happily discount Fombonne's work, although his data and results are consistent with vaccinations as the cause of the autism pandemic (see also below for why).

Discounting Fombonne                                                                                                                                               Back

Cochrane's 2005 MMR review [1] dismissed Fombonne's 2001 MMR/autism paper [2] as "impossible to interpret" and said (page 21) "The number and possible impact of biases in this study is so high that interpretation of the results is impossible".  Which is the politest possible way of putting the point.  In short, Fombonne is not a reliable source.

In another paper [3] Fombonne pulled a stunt over Canadian data, switching the data between Montreal and Quebec city, two different locations [4].

In yet another paper [5] Fombonne claimed:-

"If the prevalence figure for our new sample had increased from that in the previous study, that might have pointed toward an increase in the incidence of pervasive developmental disorders, consistent with the various claims of an "epidemic of autism" (4, 5). We did not find such an increase, and there was no statistical difference between the two prevalence rates, not even a trend in that direction."

His first claim is nonsense.  You do not need an increase or decrease in incidence to achieve an epidemic or a pandemic.  Any steady non trivial level of incidence for a new chronic lifetime condition will achieve a large increase in prevalence in a national population over time. 

To Top of Page    -  To Bennett Leventhal
And to find a new chronic lifetime condition satisfying that, all we need to do is to postulate that the increase started in the 1980s, with the new vaccination schedules. 

With that hypothesis, all Fombonne achieves is to demonstrate that with a steady level of annual vaccinations, data from the mid 1990s is consistent with a stable steady level of incidence of autism caused by a stable steady level of vaccinations starting in the mid 1980s. 

And further consistent with vaccination being the cause, we would expect to see a large increase in prevalence rates in national populations.  This is because there is no aged adult population with autism and also consistent with vaccination as the cause, they did not have the vaccinations that children have now been getting since the 1980s.  If there was, adult cases would be dying out in the same numbers as new cases arose and so would balance out the new cases in children. There are just not the numbers of aged people with autism dying because they just do not exist.  Instead whilst we have adults who do not have autism dying, we have large numbers of children coming into the population every year increasing year on year the total number of individuals with autism.  If matters continue as they are, we can predict that prevalence will continue to increase for the next 40 years until the current generations of children reach maturity and old age, and start dying out.

So whilst the data and results from the studies you cite are consistent with an environmental insult like vaccination being the cause of the autism pandemic, there is nothing to prove it is not.  If you want to continue repeating your unproven theories, you need to find that clear proof or else withdraw them.  Again, conjecture and argument are not adequate.  The world needs proof and from someone in your position, they have a right to demand it, and more especially Illinois parents of children on the autistic spectrum.

So to prove your theories, you have to find all of the aged adults and you need to find them right now, because remember, you claimed regarding the causes of autism that you "will pursue that goal through the careful study of the data."  So you have to have already proof that there are just as many adults as children with autism.  So where is the proof and where are they, the aged adults?  Nowhere, in both cases.

"fundamental question is if incidence has changed" and "no evidence" it has                      To Top of Page    -  To Bennett Leventhal
These are fundamentally erroneous assertions of yours.  As with some instances of research bias, your "fundamental" question assumes the proposition you seek to prove is true, that the number of autism cases has always been 1 in 150 since 1943, so when you get the answer you are looking for, you erroneously assume the proposition is true also.  You put the cart before the horse, as I show here. 

Compounding that error, there is no credible scientific evidence to support the assertion there has been no change in incidence of autistic spectrum disorders since 1943.

Additionally, it is no use looking only at the rate of new cases (incidence) after the new vaccination programmes in the 1980s and early 1990s to then claim that the rate of new cases has always been the same (as Fombonne also does).  That is nonscience and nonsense.

Most of the research literature on this is thin on the ground and dates mostly from the mid 1980s.  We simply have no idea what the incidence was prior to the 1980s save to assume it was around the same level as the early 1980s and that could well be an erroneous assertion also.  And the literature that does exist during and since the 1980s (including Fombonne) shows incidence and prevalence are both different to and substantially higher than the mid 1980s and therefore higher than what they must have been prior to the 1980s.  Again, I cannot fathom how you make the claims you do.  There is no factual or scientific basis for any of them.

If we assume your claim of 1 in 150 since 1943 is correct, then and only then would a change in incidence (new cases occurring) be relevant but not otherwise.  So if your claim was wrong and we still found no change in incidence since the new vaccination schedules of the early 1980s, the failure to find a change of incidence would not prove your assertion.  What it would still do is support the assertion that the changes in vaccinations schedules in the mid 1980s and early 1990s are the cause. Your analysis is therefore deeply flawed I regret to say and parents of autistic spectrum children in Illinois are paying the price.

In summary, the answer you seek assumes the proposition you need to prove is true, that the total number of cases in the population is steady at 1 in 150 since 1943.  For that to be true, incidence must be unchanged since 1943.  But if your proposition is wrong, finding an unchanged incidence in recent years since the 1980s, proves nothing.  So your problem is that even if we look for a change in incidence and not find one, you still fail to prove your hypothesis.  So in the end you prove nothing. 

I apologise when I say I struggle to understand how anyone with a reasonable intelligence can make such fundamental errors.

Additionally, whilst there is no literature on which to base the claim of no change in incidence, on the contrary, there is literature supporting the claim there has been a significant change in incidence.  There are numerous studies where the data reports a change in prevalence and, at the least implicitly, in incidence.  It is only people like you who try to put this in doubt by putting forward unproven hypotheses without any evidence to suggest that it might be due to better diagnosis and greater awareness and therefore prior "clinical blindness".  In the absence of any evidence, the reported data in the literature stands.  Unproven speculation is unscientific.

And it is precisely those assertions which you are supposed to be proving and you have produced no evidence to show they are true, again, because there is and can be none. 

To Top of Page    -  To Bennett Leventhal
 4.  You do not like my use of "pandemic".  What numerical definitions of epidemic and pandemic do you rely on? 

A pandemic is an epidemic that affects a wide geographic area.  And an epidemic is a disease or condition occurring suddenly in numbers clearly in excess of normal expectancy.  Whilst his claims are nonsense, Fombonne's data and results confirm "The rate of pervasive developmental disorders is higher than reported 15 years ago" and for childhood autism we are comparing from 2 to 8 in 10,000 in the mid 1980s with figures like Baird 2006's 38 in 10,000.  An increase in prevalence of between 500 to 1900 percent experienced nationally in a lifetime chronic condition is, I would have thought, sufficient to qualify as a pandemic.  The fact it is experienced internationally as well should put the seal on that.  But please correct me if you think I am wrong.


5.  Your assertion is again wrong.  I am not relying on service provider data.  I am relying on the peer refereed literature.  In fact, I am relying on much the same literature as you.  However, as with all such literature, it is fundamental to rely solely on the data and results, and to ignore comments and opinions of authors, if bias is to be avoided.  Every expert should know that.  And that especially applies to papers by Fombonne.  However, even that approach is also taking on trust the data and results are reliable and accurately captured and reported, which is why repeatability is so important as is post publication peer review.

[1] Demicheli V, Jefferson T, Rivetti A, Price D. Vaccines for measles, mumps and rubella in children. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2005;4:CD0044007.
Access via: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/mrwhome/106568753/AccessCochraneLibrary.html

[2] Fombonne E, Chakrabarti S. No evidence for a new variant of measles-mumps-rubella-induced autism. Pediatrics 2001;108:E58. Available at http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/108/4/e58. Accessed Oct 25, 2006

[3]  Fombonne E, Zakarian R, Bennett A, Meng L, McLean-Heywood D. Pervasive developmental disorders in Montreal, Quebec, Canada: prevalence and links with immunizations. Pediatrics. 2006 Jul;118(1):e139-50.

[4] A Tale of Two Cities: Flawed Epidemiology - F. Edward Yazbak, MD, FAAP

[5]  Suniti Chakrabarti, M.D., F.R.C.P.C.H., M.R.C.P., and Eric Fombonne, M.D., F.R.C.Psych. Pervasive Developmental Disorders in Preschool Children: Confirmation of High Prevalence Am J Psychiatry 162:1133-1141, June 2005


Sincerely


____________________________________________________________________________
From: Clifford G. Miller,
CLIFFORD MILLER, Burnhill Business Centre, 50 Burnhill Road, Beckenham, Kent BR3 3LA, England
Tel: + 44 (0) 20 8663 0044 Fax: + 44 (0) 20 8663 0011

http://www.cliffordmiller.com
____________________________________________________________________________

   -  To Top of Page    -  To Bennett Leventhal
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: RE: World Autism Pandemic
Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2008 05:41:47 -0500
From: Leventhal, Bennett
To: 'Clifford G. Miller' 
References: <480DE423.50502@cliffordmiller.com>


I am not ignoring you. 
 
First of all, I am traveling and a bit too busy to offer a detailed response at this time. 
 
Secondly, I would hope you can do a literature search and likely find the papers you need to answer these questions. 
 
Thirdly, the critical question is not one of changing prevalence.  We all agree that prevalence has changed.  The question is if incidence has changed and there is no evidence of that.  The work of Baird et al is interesting and is quite relevant but does not make a case for a change in incidence but rather a change in prevalence.  And the work of Howland et al and Fombonne and Chakrabati all support the change in prevalence without a change in incidence with evidence of the reasons for this.  And, most data suggest that there has not been a significant change in the prevalence of so-called “Kanner” or classical autism, rather an increase in the spectrum disorders which is completely consistent with the notion that diagnostic criteria and ascertainment account for most, if not all of the change.  It would be nice if there were more population based incidence studies but they are complex and expensive.  We are doing one now and are not yet ready to report but our initial prevalence estimates may be closer to Baird’s but there does not appear to be a growing incidence.  More to come in the next few years as these studies are completed.
 
Fourth, you use terms like “pandemic” yet fail to provide data to support your assertions.  I don’t “discount”  any notion but would like to see the data.  If you have data that support an increased incidence, please feel free to point me to them.
 
Fifth, and finally, most of the data on the so-called epidemic comes from service providers who are now properly swamped with demands for specialized care for a population who did not receive such care in the past.  This does not prove an epidemic as much as it demonstrates how the service systems work, or don’t work.  Perhaps this is the only point on which we can agree at this point.
 
BLL
 
 
 

Bennett L. Leventhal, MD
Professor of Psychiatry
Director,
Center for Child Mental Health & Developmental Neuroscience
Institute for Juvenile Research
University of Illinois
1747 W. Roosevelt Road, M/C 747
Chicago, IL 60608
Voice:  312-355-3026
Fax:     312-355-3634
Email: 

   -  To Top of Page    -  To Bennett Leventhal
From: Clifford G. Miller
Sent: Tuesday, April 22, 2008 8:12 AM
To: Leventhal, Bennett
Cc: Lisa Blakemore-Brown
Subject: World Autism Pandemic


Dear Dr Leventhal,

The World Autism Pandemic

Ms Blakemore-Brown has passed me a copy of your email to her of 21st April (text below) regarding the world autism pandemic.  I hope you do not mind if draw attention to some interesting and enigmatic contradictions. 

I understand you are reported in The Chicago Courier News expressing the personal belief about autism spectrum disorders that:-

"Research has shown that 1 in 150 kids having one form or another of the brain disorder has remained relatively constant since 1943, when Leo Kanner first identified the condition."

I trust you appreciate that if you assert something is a fact, it is incumbent on you to produce the evidence to prove it.  So if you claim there never has been an increase in autism, you must surely have sound scientific proof for your assertion.  I am fortunate to have had the opportunity to carry out a "careful study of the data".   Whilst I am content in the knowledge there is no credible scientific evidence to support your theory and belief, I invite you to produce it.  If you are to shake the documented factual position showing an increase in study after study, then it is incumbent on you to produce the scientific evidence to prove your theory and show why the documented factual position is erroneous. 

You also say regarding the causes of autism that you "will pursue that goal through the careful study of the data." Clearly, if we are to study the causes of autism, study of factors like a pandemic increase since the mid 1980s are clearly essential starting points.  With differential data of that kind it is easier to identify trends and correlate to environmental changes and triggers which could cause the pandemic, such as a vastly expanded childhood vaccine programme and increases in environmental toxins, like mercury. 

So if you have already discounted the autism pandemic is real, despite the numbers to suggest that is the case, and if you are determined to find out what causes autism, you must already have to hand the results of your existing "careful study of the data" to prove your position.  And to demonstrate you are right, you may wish to share your prior careful study of the data showing the autism pandemic is an illusion.

I am sure it would be a great benefit to the world for you to prove your theory that there has never been an increase in autism cases and that the prevalence has always been the same.  In your email to Ms Blakemore-Brown you put forward the theory that the increase is due to 'clinical "blindness"', that clinicians did not notice autism before. So you must be able to produce credible scientific evidence to prove that theory also.  I invite you to do so. 

The simplest evidence to prove the prevalence of autism has always been the same is a study of the prevalence of autism in adults over 25 and compare that to the prevalence in children and young adults under 26.  If, as your theory claims, there has never been any change we should see exactly the same prevalence in any band of age groups.  To make the task easier, we could limit the category to those with what is sometimes called childhood or typical autism.  It has distinctive behaviours which are difficult to miss, even with a good deal of "clinical blindness" and has been well known and documented over many years.  

I would observe that your prevalence figures of 1 in 150 have been overtaken by events in the UK.  A recent UK figure is 1 in 86 [Baird 2006].  Accordingly, pandemic is the more appropriate term albeit the numbers at this level might be considered beyond being even "pandemic".

I look forward to hearing from you, no doubt soon, as you should have readily to hand your previous "careful study of the data". 

Sincerely

____________________________________________________________________________
From: Clifford G. Miller,
CLIFFORD MILLER, Burnhill Business Centre, 50 Burnhill Road, Beckenham, Kent BR3 3LA, England
Tel: + 44 (0) 20 8663 0044 Fax: + 44 (0) 20 8663 0011

http://www.cliffordmiller.com
____________________________________________________________________________



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