TastySuckToy
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2019
- Posts
- 3,543
Here's a few key studies investigating vaccines and autism:Here we go again.
1. Jain et al. (2015) - JAMA
- Study Size: 95,727 children
- Method: Analyzed vaccination records and autism diagnoses
- Result: No increased autism risk for MMR vaccine
- Conclusion: No association between vaccination and autism risk
- Source: JAMA, Vol. 313, No. 15
2. Hviid et al. (2019) - Annals of Internal Medicine
- Study Size: 657,461 Danish children
- Method: Nationwide cohort study tracking vaccination and autism diagnoses
- Result: No link between MMR vaccine and autism
- Conclusion: Vaccine does not increase autism risk
- Source: Annals of Internal Medicine, Vol. 170, No. 8
3. Taylor et al. (2014) - Cochrane Systematic Review
- Study Size: Multiple studies meta-analyzed
- Method: Systematic review of available research
- Result: No credible evidence linking vaccines to autism
- Conclusion: Vaccines are safe regarding autism risk
- Source: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
4. CDC Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring Network Study (2013)
- Study Size: Multiple regional cohorts
- Method: Longitudinal tracking of developmental outcomes
- Result: No statistically significant correlation between vaccination and autism
- Conclusion: Supports vaccine safety
- Source: CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
5. Uno et al. (2015) - Vaccine
- Study Size: 7,930 children
- Method: Analyzed vaccination timing and autism diagnosis
- Result: No relationship between vaccine timing and autism onset
- Conclusion: Vaccine schedules do not trigger autism
- Source: Vaccine, Vol. 33, No. 21
These studies consistently demonstrate no causal link between vaccines and autism, representing the current scientific consensus.
I don't think any one study claiming the opposite of multiple others is a particularly strong argument.