Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson stated, “There's never been a placebo-controlled study on childhood vaccines." That's false.
Despite overwhelming evidence debunking it, the vaccine-autism myth is rising, fueled by misinformation after the pandemic.
Vaccines do not cause autism, however many Americans believe they do. Now, Trump and RFK Jr. are perpetuating the myth.
There is no one factor that causes autism — or explains its growing prevalence. Researchers are seeking explanations for the ...
Trump did not explicitly say in the interview that vaccines cause autism, a false claim that traces back to a retracted study ...
Dave Weldon’s long record of promoting the disproven link between vaccines and autism raises concerns among some public ...
It is because for many, the idea of a vaccine-autism link gives them hope. As a medical sociologist, I spent three years ...
The connection between vaccines and autism has been a persistent myth, one that has fueled vaccine hesitancy for decades despite the science, experts said. With the COVID-19 pandemic in the ...
With improved screening and autism services, diagnosis is increasingly happening at younger ages, which means rising rates.
A community note on X said the congresswoman's stance "can only be explained through sheer ignorance, or some sort of ...