I already stated that scientists are finding manifestations of autism in utero. My remarks about the 18 month olds are in reference to these "sudden" appearances of autism around the time of the vaccines.
With all the research done on this, there has been no study which has found a causative link between "regressive autism" and vaccines.
You can "I don't buy it" all you want. But if vaccines cause autism, it should be able to be shown to be the case in study after study, not simply in anecdotes and "videos," assuming they are done according to scientific method and proper study procedures. Especially if children are dropping into instantaneous autism immediately upon vaccination!
On the other hand, the more research is done, the more it appears to have a genetic etiology. We have a lot of research to do, but one cannot make a case for vaccines causing autism because the evidence is not there. A parent insisting it is so simply doesn't make it so.
But this is not the place for the autism argument. That's not what the thread is about.
Well, it is kind of about autism because that's a major reason why people aren't vaccinating and it is causing an outbreak. And while no link has been proved, that doesn't, logically mean there is no link.
I think it is clear that vaccines are safe. In the main. Billions get vaccinated without incident. That's super safe. But for a minority, there may be an issue.
I've looked at the studies and the summaries of the studies. None have studied the actual children who have been diagnosed with regressive autism after a vaccine. No study as to reactions, timing, etc.
And the thing is, I don;t think vaccines cause autism. But they may trigger it in some. Has anyone studied that? Not to my knowledge.
The rhetoric gets stronger as panic sets in about this. But no study has totally
disproved a link. Not one. Instead, they've failed to find a link. The truth is that what experts state is: "The American Academy of Pediatrics, the CDC, the World Health Organization, and the Institute of Medicine all agree that
there's probably no relationship between autism and vaccines."
http://www.webmd.com/brain/autism/searching-for-answers/vaccines-autism
That has been translated into "antivaxxers" (more rhetoric), are insane and theories about a possible link have been totally discredited. They haven't.
I think, again, but no one has responded to this, that making it us against them and calling people who have concerns stupid and selfish, is dangerous.
Bottom line is we need people to be able to make educated decisions based on reason - based on clear and honest explanations of the benefits and risks we know about and don't. Because even if there is a possible link, the benefits would still far outweigh the risks. Perhaps a different schedule would be better for some - there are plenty of doctors who are okay with that. But back people against the wall and we have a major problem.