Richard Deth
Richard Carlton Deth  | |
|---|---|
| Born | March 23, 1945 | 
| Alma mater | |
| Known for | Supporting a link between the use of thiomersal in vaccines to autism | 
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Pharmacology | 
| Institutions | Nova Southeastern University | 
| Thesis | The relative contribution of Ca++ influx and intracellular Ca++ release in the drug induced contraction of the rabbit aorta (1975) | 
Richard Carlton Deth is an American neuropharmacologist, a former professor of pharmacology at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts, and is on the scientific advisory board of the National Autism Association. Deth has published scientific studies on the role of D4 dopamine receptors in psychiatric disorders, as well as the book, Molecular Origins of Human Attention: The Dopamine-Folate Connection. He has also become a prominent voice in the controversies in autism and thiomersal and vaccines, due to his hypothesis that certain children are more at risk than others because they lack the normal ability to excrete neurotoxic metals.