Vaccines and Autism: The Wrong Question, the Right Conversation

Exploring how internal physiology, not blame, holds the key to understanding neurodevelopment.

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Let’s dive into the persistent question that keeps emerging

Do vaccines lead to autism?

After twenty-five years of thorough research spanning the globe. Analysing various populations and employing diverse methodologies.

We can confidently assert

No.

The evidence is overwhelming: routine childhood vaccines do not elevate autism risk.

This is not a mere guess or a crafted message for public relations.

It’s a conclusion founded on the most robust forms of scientific evidence.

Even when researchers focus on vulnerable groups.

Premature infants, children with autistic siblings, or those with identified genetic vulnerabilities.

The results remain consistent.

The Evidence

There is no link.

This is not mere speculation or a soundbite for public consumption; rather, it is a conclusion drawn from the most robust scientific evidence.

Large-scale nationwide registry cohort studies involving 650,000 to 2 million participants found no association.

A meta-analysis of cohort studies covering 1.2 million individuals confirmed the same. High-risk sibling studies, involving around 95,000 children, also showed no link.

Even when examining the individual ingredients of vaccines through toxicological and pharmacological analysis, no connection to autism was found.

Across every type of study—population-level, familial, and ingredient-focused—the conclusion is the same: vaccines do not cause autism.

Importantly, the immune response triggered by a vaccine like MMR is negligible compared to the full-body inflammatory storm produced by the diseases they guard against.

Measles, for instance, can elevate IL-6 levels a hundredfold beyond what any vaccine could induce.

Equating the two is biologically incoherent.

So why does vaccine anxiety persist?

Because many parents have experienced moments of regression.

Sudden changes in their child’s development following illness, stress, or, yes, even a jab.

They’re not imagining it.

But the event isn’t the

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