There’s no evidence linking vaccines to autism

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There’s no evidence linking vaccines to autism
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The claim gained momentum after a 1998 study suggested the MMR vaccine caused autism in children. But that study was retracted more than a decade ago.

The claim gained momentum after a 1998 study suggested the MMR vaccine caused autism in children, Juan Dumois, M.D., a pediatric infectious diseases physician at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital, told VERIFY.

with older siblings. About 2,000 of those children were classified as being at risk for autism because they had older siblings diagnosed with ASD.

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