They haven't. It turned out that the medical study linking autism to vaccines was a hoax!!! The doctor responsible lost his medical license. The medical community has rejected that study, and doesn't believe autism is linked to vaccines.
Truth or Scare - 2013 Do Vaccines Cause Autism 2-5 was released on: USA: 21 September 2013
Common risks associated with vaccines such as swelling, fever and irritation. But NOT AUTISM.
MMR vaccines, as well as other vaccines, do not cause autism. Extensive research has been done into the relationship between autism and vaccines and none has been found. The doctor who originally reported a correlation has since retracted his statements, admitted his results were faked, and lost his medical license.
You can go to autismtutors.com. They offer services specializing in the tutoring of kids with autism.
Autism can be good because a lot of autism kids have special talents that we don't have, a lot of them have a picture perfect memory.
You are a freak for asking. No.
The child will not get autism from an MMR vaccination. Countries with different vaccination ingredients or different vaccination schedules have increasing rates of autism, too. Research indicates that the MMR vaccination does not cause autism. Videos and descriptions of the children thought to have had autism triggered by the thimerosal-containing MMR vaccines show that they had symptoms of autism prior to the vaccination. Autism is a genetic condition that, in most cases, is assumed to have an environmental trigger in the womb or early infancy. There is the possibility that a very small portion of the people with autism have the condition triggered by a vaccination, but that number is statistically insignificant, so it is too small to be detected in scientific studies. But there is that possibility with other events, too, such as feeding your baby processed baby food or breastfeeding for less than 2 years or eating peanuts while pregnant or any other events that are not associated with autism. Hypothetically, if a child were to have autism triggered by a vaccination, it could be because of the ingredients of the vaccination, the child's stress at receiving a vaccination, the body's immune response being triggered, or some other factor involved in the process of getting a vaccination. Another potential cause for concern is the fact that human DNA is in some of the MMR vaccines. It has not been scientifically proven nor disproven but the dates match up according to what I've read. I would love to know where autism is on the rise and vaccines are not available as someone wrote previously. I wasn't aware of that.
there has been rumors around for years that the mercury THAT USED TO be used in vaccines was the cause for autism however to not have a child vaccinated can make that child get those diseases that we'd finally all but gotten rid of some of which can kill paralyze etc.
No, shots cannot cause autism - this is impossible.Autism is a neurological difference that is a result of genetics, it starts when the brain starts to develop within the womb during the second trimester. Vaccines cannot travel back in time to change a persons genes or development in the womb, nor can they change a persons entire brain structure in an infant. The idea that vaccines cause autism is a very outdated a debunked myth.
Our site, given below, includes teaching materials for teaching kids with Autism.
If anything, autism is neurogenetic, but no one knows whether or not, autism is based on a faulty gene. Most theories about causes of the ailment are about environmental factors; particularly vaccines (which contain mercury a highly neurotoxic element). Despite "Rett Syndrome" (which isn't a true form of autism), it doesn't characterize any visible mutations of the body. It could be that the way someone's genes are built and organized, can make the person prone do neurological damage from vaccines or other toxins.
On average 4.3 males have autism for every 1 female. So only about 18%-19% of people with autism are female.