Are Vaccines Made With Cells From Aborted Babies Linked to Autism?
There has been much talk about the recently published study by Dr. Teresa Deisher from Sound Choice Pharmaceuticals that shows a correlation between vaccines produced in cell lines procured from aborted fetuses and the incidence of autism. Ref. Source 3
Chemists expose side effects of antimalarial drug
The drug chloroquine has long been used to treat malaria, but it is not without side effects. To better understand how chloroquine toxicity occurs, medical researchers set out to investigate what the drug binds to in human cells. Ref. Source 8r.
Best way to picture it is like this:
* If no one had vaccines there would be lots of people dying from things that they could have been saved from simply by getting a vaccine.
* If autism was caused by vaccines then the number of people with autism would be far greater than it is now because millions of people are vaccinated each day.
Online information on vaccines and autism not always reliable. Google search results in several countries can provide unreliable information based on old, 'weak' scientific studies. Researchers analyzing the top 200 websites in a search for 'vaccines autism' found that 10-24 percent had a negative stance on vaccines, which can potentially impact on public health. Source 1a.
Tdap vaccination for pregnant women does not increase risk of autism. A newstudy of more than 80,000 children born over a 4-year period showed that the prenatal Tdap vaccination (Tetanus, diphtheria, acellular pertussis) was not associated with increased risk of autism spectrum disorder in children. Source 9x.
No link found between MMR vaccine and autism, even among children with other risk factors for autism. A nationwide cohort study of all children born in Denmark to Danish-born mothers between 1999 through 2010 concluded that the mumps, measles, and rubella (MMR) vaccine does not increase the risk of autism, does not trigger autism in susceptible children, and is not associated with clustering of autism cases following vaccination. Source 2r.