Scientists fear MMR link to autism

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
Scientists fear MMR link to autism


New American research shows that there could be a link between the controversial MMR triple vaccine and autism and bowel disease in children.
The study appears to confirm the findings of British doctor Andrew Wakefield, who caused a storm in 1998 by suggesting a possible link.
Now a team from the Wake Forest University School of Medicine in North Carolina are examining 275 children with regressive autism and bowel disease - and of the 82 tested so far, 70 prove positive for the measles virus.
Last night the team's leader, Dr Stephen Walker, said: 'Of the handful of results we have in so far, all are vaccine strain and none are wild measles.

Seasonal flu vaccine fairy tale rapidly collapsing as the truth comes out



Mike Adams – Natural News January 18, 2011
Like a medical house of cards in an earthquake, the seasonal flu vaccine mythology is collapsing right before our eyes. After months of urging everyone to get vaccinated (and blaming non-vaccinated people for skipping out on their “public health obligation”), UK health authorities announced last week that “healthy people” were to blame for causing a vaccine shortage that they claim now threatens the lives of sick children.
As part of this ruse, they even suggested that pharmacies should be banned from selling flu vaccines to healthy people, explaining that healthy people didn’t really need them anyway.

So much for the big Flu vaccine delusion that “everybody needs a vaccine.” As UK health authorities are now blatantly admitting, that was all just a fairy tale that crumpled the instant they ran out of excess vaccine inventory.
 

TenPenny

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 9, 2004
17,466
138
63
Location, Location
New American research shows that there could be a link between the controversial MMR triple vaccine and autism and bowel disease in children.
The study appears to confirm the findings of British doctor Andrew Wakefield, who caused a storm in 1998 by suggesting a possible link..


You mean that it confirms the study of made up results? The one that included kids who already had autism before their vaccination, and blamed it on the vaccine?

That's some powerful vaccine, if it can go back in time and retroactively cause autism.
 

Tonington

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 27, 2006
15,441
150
63
They still haven't demonstrated that immune dysfunction is not a secondary process linked to autism itself. And again, the backlash from Wakefields fradulent conclusions lead to fewer immunizations, yet the growth of autism disorder diagnoses has not slowed at all.

You can't escape causality here, and the multiple studies that have investigated the causal relationship have found it is non-existant. Some include meta-analysis of tens of thousands of children with autism, and still they cannot establish causality.