No Vaccine-Autism Link

Another Study Sees No Vaccine-Autism Link

Although some parents worry about the sheer number of vaccines babies typically receive, a new U.S. government study finds no evidence that more vaccinations increase the risk of autism.

Dr. Lane: In the world of chiropractic, my stance from my prior career in public health that vaccines are both necessary and helpful to the public puts me at odds with the rest of my profession.  It is the popular chiropractic stance that vaccines are a form of minor surgery or not part of natural healing, or whatever the excuse of the DC I am talking to.

I am not a parrot who went to school to repeat what others have told me to say.  Once I graduated I needed to think for myself and use my own education coupled with my medical education to draw my own conclusions.  Anything less would be accepting the role of being a student and not the real meaning of the word, “doctor” (“teacher”).

Looking at about 1,000 U.S. children with or without autism, researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found no connection between early childhood vaccinations and autism risk.

Children with autism and those without had the same total exposure to vaccine antigens — the substances in vaccines that trigger the immune system to develop infection-fighting antibodies.

“This should give more reassurance to parents,” said lead researcher Dr. Frank DeStefano, director of the CDC’s Immunization Safety Office.

The findings, which appear online March 29 in the Journal of Pediatrics, cast further doubt on a link between vaccines and autism spectrum disorders — a group of developmental brain disorders that impair a child’s ability to communicate and socialize.

The first worries came from a small British study in 1998 that proposed a connection between the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine and autism. A spate of research since has found no link, and the original study was eventually retracted by the Lancet, the journal that published it.

Then came concerns about thimerosal, a preservative once used in certain childhood vaccines (but never MMR) that contains small amounts of ethyl mercury. Again, international studies failed to show a link to autism.

More recently, worries have shifted to the notion that children are getting “too many vaccinations, too soon.” In the United States, children can be immunized against 14 different diseases by the time they are 2.

DeStefano said his team focused on antigen exposure, rather than just the number of vaccinations, because that gives a more precise idea of the “immune system stimulation” kids received through vaccines.

A recent survey found that about one-third of parents thought children receive too many vaccinations in their first two years of life, and that the shots could contribute to autism.

But there’s no scientific evidence of that, said Dr. Paul Offit, chief of infectious diseases at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

He said it’s understandable that parents might worry. “You see your baby receiving all these vaccines. It looks like too much. It feels like too much,” Offit said.

But, he said, there’s no biological basis for the idea that vaccines “overstimulate” the immune system, and that somehow leads to autism.

Every day, babies’ immune systems battle many more antigens than are present in vaccines, DeStefano explained. “Most infants can handle exposure to many antigens,” he said.

The findings are based on 256 children with an autism spectrum disorder and 752 autism-free kids who were matched to them based on age, sex and health insurance plan.

The CDC team found that kids’ total antigen exposure in the first two years of life was unrelated to their risk of developing an autism disorder.

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