Q. What causes autism?
We don't yet know the cause of autism. I think we will find there is not a single cause, but a number of contributing factors, including genetic predisposition.
Q. How did vaccinations become linked with autism?
Autism began being linked with vaccines because of a single,
flawed study in the United Kingdom in the late 1990s involving 11 or 12
children. The conclusion of this research has been proven totally
false.
Q. Are there scientific studies that link vaccines to autism?
No. Scientific investigations have failed to demonstrate vaccines as a cause autism.
Q. Are any vaccines singled out?
In the United Kingdom, the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR)
vaccine is implicated by parents as a cause of autism, in part because
of the temporal relationship of the two. That is, the first MMR vaccine
is administered around 12 to 13 months of age, a typical age for the
diagnosis of autism--although there is no evidence to suggest any other
connection. In this country, that theory was quickly dropped and what
persists is the idea that vaccines containing the preservative
thimerosal cause autism. However, thimerosal was removed from vaccines
for children (except some influenza and virus vaccines) in 2001, and
the cases of autism continue to increase instead of decrease.
Q. Why has the number of diagnoses of autism increased?
The definition of autism in recent years has broadened to include
a whole host of learning disabilities and psychiatric disorders that,
in the past, were not labeled autism.
Q. Why do the misconceptions about autism persist?
There is an abundance of misleading and scientifically unreliable
information on the Web and in the media from alleged authorities and
even celebrities. However, the Academies of Pediatrics and General
Practice, the Centers for Disease Control, the Institute of Medicine,
and the World Health Organization have all agreed that vaccines do not
cause autism.
Q. What are the risks when parents refuse vaccinations?
There have been outbreaks of preventable diseases among
unvaccinated children in this country--very recently in San Diego and
Hawaii. All of the cases of measles we've had in this country in the
past 16 years have been due to importations from countries abroad where
measles still exists. The disease then spread into clusters of
unvaccinated children. Diseases are just a jet plane ride away, and
children who are not vaccinated are at risk.