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by dagw
3063 days ago
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As usual, it was the fault of the media and public for interpreting it in that way. Absolutely not. The paper was straight up fraudulent, written purely to push an agenda and quite possibly being funded by groups looking sue the vaccine manufacturers. Wakefield spent the rest of his career actively defending and championing the causal relationship way beyond even what his fraudulent evidence might suggest, and it was the media calling bullshit on his so called research that eventually got the paper retracted and him struck off the UK medical register. Look, I love complaining about bad science reporting misrepresenting research as much as the next person, but this is very much not one of those cases. |
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What the paper really claimed is that, based on parent's recollections, there may be a link between MMR vaccine and autism, and further studies should be done on it, which is quite reasonable. Whether the paper is fraudulent (I don't think it is), and whether an author of the paper separately claimed a causal relationship, is orthogonal to whether the paper itself claimed that "vaccines cause autism" which is a creation of the media, encouraged by Wakefield.