This essay examines how recent political intervention has reshaped the CDC’s public messaging on vaccines and autism. In Part ...
Medical experts say the CDC “is promoting the outdated, disproven idea that vaccines cause autism" and advise parents to ...
The United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has revised its long-standing guidance about vaccines and ...
NEW YORK (AP) — A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website has been changed to contradict the longtime scientific conclusion that vaccines do not cause autism, spurring outrage among a ...
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The author says every individual with autism is unique. There are certainly many different causes for autism. Vaccines are not one of them.
Changing its web page, the CDC now promotes the myth that vaccines are linked to autism despite years of research refuting the claim.
The rewriting of a page on the CDC’s website to assert the false claim that vaccines may cause autism sparked a torrent of anger and anguish from doctors, scientists, and parents who say Health and ...
The CDC now states that “scientific studies have not ruled out the possibility that infant vaccines contribute to the ...
Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-Louisiana), who voted to confirm Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. after he pledged not to remove language stating vaccines do not cause autism from the CDC website, ...
The vaccine safety panel advising the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday discussed the use of aluminum in ...