The largest study so far into vaccinum and autism has concluded there is no link , even in children who have a higher risk of developing the disorder . In fact , the researchers found that unvaccinated tiddler were more potential to go on to be diagnosed with autism than those who experience vaccine .
The myth that vaccines make autism has been debunk many , many times .
In 1998 Andrew Wakefield issue a sketch based on 12 children that linked the morbilli , mumps , and rubella ( MMR ) vaccine to autism . The upshot have not been replicated , and it by and by transpired thathe had falsified datum , for which his aesculapian license was revoked .
Another study in 2017 linked aluminum in vaccines to autism . This study was withdrawn after scientists noticed picture had been manipulated , and one of the cobalt - authors claimed that figures in the newspaper publisher weredeliberately altered before publication .
Nevertheless , the myth remain and can spread around the Internet like wildfire , contributing to a situation where morbilli cases havedoubled in the last yearand teenagers areforced to get the vaccine behind their parents ' backs .
The latest study to conclude there is no link between the MMR vaccinum and autism looked at 657,461 tiddler born in Denmark between 1999 and 2010 , including 6,517 children who were diagnose with autism spectrum upset ( ASD ) .
The subject field , issue inAnnals of Internal Medicine , receive that youngster who had siblings with autism were seven times more likely to go on to be diagnose with ASD than children without a family chronicle of the disorder , and boys were four times more likely to be diagnose than daughter .
However , even in these higher - hazard group , there was no connectedness between getting vaccinated and being diagnose with autism .
In fact , the Danish squad found that the 5 percentage of nestling in the study who had no vaccinations were 17 percentmorelikely to be name with autism than those who had received vaccinations .
" The study strongly indorse that MMR vaccination does not increase the risk for autism , does not trigger autism in susceptible children , and is not associated with bunch of autism cases after vaccination , " the source from the Statens Serum Institut in Copenhagen conclude in their paper .
The study append to the ( already very tumid ) body of grounds that shows there is no link between vaccinum and autism .
“ parent should not jump the vaccine out of fear for autism , ” lead study writer Dr Anders Hviid toldReuters . “ The danger of not vaccinating includes a resurgence in measles which we are see preindication of today in the kind of outbreak . "