New Straits Times

Study on 650,000 Danish kids finds no link between vaccine, autism

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WASHINGTON: A study following more than 650,000 Danish children for more than a decade has led researcher­s to the same conclusion as previous efforts: the measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccine does not increase a child’s risk of autism.

The study, which followed all Danish children born between 1999 and 2010 until 2013, compared the number of vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed kids who were diagnosed with autism, and found no difference

“We found no support for the hypothesis of increased risk for autism after MMR vaccinatio­n in a nationwide unselected population of Danish children,” researcher­s wrote in the United States journal Annals of Internal Medicine.

The authors, from the Statens Serum Institut, the University of Copenhagen and Stand University School of Medicine, point out that their study came to the same conclusion as a 2002 study that followed 537,000 Danish children.

And they cite 10 other studies on childhood vaccines, including six on the MMR vaccine, which also found no links between vaccinatio­n and autism.

In comparison to the hundreds of thousands of children studied for years whose data researcher­s say shows no link between the MMR vaccine and autism, the 1998 study that anti-vaccine proponents still often cite to claim a link included only 12 children.

That study was retracted by the medical journal that published it and the author, who had falsified the results, lost his medical licence.

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