A page of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's website was changed to include a false claim about autism and vaccines. Multiple CDC officials familiar with the situation said the change was made by political appointees inside the Department of Health and Human Services without input from relevant agency staffers.
Breakdown
- The CDC website now includes an asterisk and note suggesting studies have not ruled out a link between infant vaccines and autism.
- No CDC autism or vaccine experts were consulted on the change, which was made by political appointees. 14s
- The claim that vaccines cause autism originated from a fraudulent 1998 study, which was retracted 12 years later. 20s
- Scientific consensus from numerous studies is that vaccines do not cause autism, though the exact cause of autism is still unknown. 42s
- The NIH has announced a $50 million investment in autism research. 2m 2s