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CDC Fails to Produce Studies to Support its Claim that Vaccines Given During the First Six Months of Life 'Do Not Cause Autism'

NEWS PROVIDED BY
Informed Consent Action Network
March 13, 2020

AUSTIN, March 13, 2020 /Christian Newswire/ -- In a federal lawsuit filed by the non-profit Informed Consent Action Network (ICAN), the Center for Disease Control (CDC) has failed to produce scientific studies to back up its long-declared assertion that vaccines given to babies in the first six months of life do not cause autism. 
 
The CDC claims on its website that "Vaccines Do Not Cause Autism." Despite this claim, studies have found between 40% and 70% of parents with an autistic child continue to blame vaccines for their child's autism, typically pointing to vaccines given during the first six months of life.

Vaccines given during the first six months of life, according to the CDC's childhood vaccine schedule, include three doses each of DTaP, HepB, Hib, PCV13 and IPV, for a total of fifteen doses in these six months.

In the summer of 2019, ICAN submitted a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to the CDC for "All studies relied upon by CDC to claim that the DTaP vaccine does not cause autism."

ICAN also submitted this same request for HepB, Hib, PCV13 and IPV vaccines, and additionally requested that the CDC provide studies to support its claim that the cumulative exposure to these vaccines during the first six months of life do not cause autism.

Despite months of demands, the CDC failed to produce a single study in response to these FOIA requests.

ICAN was therefore forced to sue the CDC in federal court, where the CDC finally entered into a stipulation, signed by a federal court judge, that made clear it does not have any study to support that these vaccines do not cause autism.

In the stipulation, the CDC was only able to identify 20 studies:

  • One relating to MMR (a vaccine ICAN did not challenge);
     
  • Thirteen relating to thimerosal (an ingredient not in any of the vaccines ICAN queried);
     
  • Five relating to both MMR and thimerosal; and
     
  • One relating to antigen (not a vaccine) exposure.

On the CDC's list of studies was a recent review by the Institute of Medicine (IOM), paid for by the CDC, which conducted a comprehensive review for studies relating to whether DTaP does or does not cause autism. The result was that the IOM could not identify a single study to support that DTaP does not cause autism. Instead, the only relevant study the IOM could identify found an association between DTaP and autism.

In other words, the CDC listed a review in response to the FOIA requests which concluded that there are no studies to support that DTaP does not cause autism.

"The CDC complains that those raising concerns about vaccine safety are unscientific and misinformed," says Del Bigtree, the Emmy-winning producer of "Vaxxed" and host of the weekly online fact-based science and health news program "The HighWire." "But when we asked the CDC for studies to support its claim that 'vaccines do not cause autism,' it is clear that their claim is not grounded in science."

"When it comes to autism, vaccines are the one suspected culprit that the CDC claims to have exhaustively investigated," Bigtree explains, "yet the CDC could not provide a single study to support that any of the vaccines given during the first six months of life do not cause autism.

"The most recent data from CDC shows that 1 in 36 children born this year in the USA will develop autism," Bigtree says. "This is a true epidemic. If the CDC had spent the same resources studying vaccines and autism, as it did waging a media campaign against parents that claim vaccines caused their child's autism, the world would be a better place for everyone." 

This is another of ICAN's numerous victories against federal health agencies regarding vaccine safety. Prior victories include:

  • The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) concedes it has not provided a single vaccine safety report to Congress as required by the Mandate for Safer Childhood Vaccines in the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986. ICAN v. HHS, No. 18-cv-3215 (S.D.N.Y.)
     
  • The Federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) concedes that it does not have any clinical trials to support injecting the flu shot or Tdap vaccines into pregnant women. ICAN v. FDA, No. 18-cv-11237 (S.D.N.Y.)
     
  • The National Institutes of Health (NIH) concedes that the Task Force on Safer Childhood Vaccines has not made a single recommendation for improving vaccine safety during the period at issue. ICAN v. NIH, No. 18-cv-2000 (S.D.N.Y.)
     
  • The FDA, pursuant to a FOIA request from ICAN, eventually produced the clinical trials it relied upon to license the current MMR vaccine which revealed that these clinical trials had in total of less than 1,000 participants and far more adverse reactions than previously acknowledged.

"The HighWire with Del Bigtree" broke this news in it's March 5th episode, and followed up with additional information in its March 13th episode. Both can be streamed on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and its website TheHighwire.com, among other platforms.

ICAN's initial court complaint can be found here: https://www.icandecide.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/001-COMPLAINT-against-Centers-for-Disease-Control-and-Prevention.pdf
 
The court stipulation and order can be found here: https://www.icandecide.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Stipulation-and-Order-Fully-Executed.pdf 
 
SOURCE Informed Consent Action Network

CONTACT: Catharine Layton, 714-360-3400

Related Links

https://www.icandecide.org/