False Claim About Cause of Autism Highlighted on Pennsylvania Senate Panel
SciCheck Digest
Studies have found the rate of autism is the same in vaccinated and unvaccinated children. But the false claim that vaccines are associated with the disorder persists. A prominent spreader of COVID-19 misinformation wrongly told legislators in Pennsylvania that autism is virtually nonexistent among the unvaccinated, citing the Amish population.
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Evidence has shown that the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine commonly given to children isn’t related to the development of autism.
Rather, autism is understood to be caused by a combination of factors — some genetic and some environmental — although the disorder is still being studied. The environmental factors that can increase the risk of autism include advanced age of either parent and complications during birth, according to recent research. Vaccination is not a contributing factor.
But the false claim about vaccination and autism has been circulating since 1998, when a wrongly suggested the MMR vaccine was linked to autism.. The General Medical Council in the United Kingdom for his dishonesty and irresponsibility in the paper. But the baseless claim has remained.
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