L'étude sur l'autisme a été démontrée fausse et DEPUBLIEE !!!! ça arrive vraiment pas souvent, surtout dans un journal comme The Lancet !!! (un hoax : le gars était financé par des parents qui voulaient poursuivre des compagnies) :
Vaccines Fast Facts (CNN avec liens)
2004 - Co-authors of the Wakefield study begin removing their names from the article when they discover Wakefield had been paid by had been paid by lawyers representing parents who planned to sue vaccine manufacturers.
February 2010 - The Lancet, the British medical journal that published Wakefield's study, officially retracts the article. Britain also revokes Wakefield's medical license.
2011 - Investigative reporter Brian Deer writes a series of articles in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) exposing Wakefield's fraud. The articles state that he used distorted data and falsified medical histories of children that may have led to an unfounded relationship between vaccines and the development of autism.
2011 - The U.S. Public Health Service finds that 63% of parents who refuse and delay vaccines do so for fear their children could have serious side effects.
May 14, 2014 - The Institute of Medicine releases a report "rejecting a causal relationship between the MMR vaccine and autism."
June 17, 2014 - After analyzing 10 studies, all of which looked at whether there was a link between vaccines and autism and involved a total of over one-million children, the University of Sydney publishes a report saying there is no correlation between vaccinations and the development of autism.
5 myths surrounding vaccines -- and the reality (CNN avec liens)
Childhood vaccines are safe. Seriously. (CNN avec liens)
Children should get vaccinated against preventable and potentially deadly diseases Period.
That's what a project that screened more than 20,000 scientific titles and 67 papers on vaccine safety concludes this week. The review appears in the latest edition of the medical journal Pediatrics.
The evidence strongly suggests that side effects from vaccines are incredibly rare, the study authors said. They found no ties between vaccines and the rising number of children with autism, as a small but vocal group of anti-vaccine activists, including actors Jenny McCarthy and Jim Carey, have said.
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