Guest guest Posted January 6, 2011 Report Share Posted January 6, 2011 http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2011/01/06/2011010600873.html British Medical Journal: Autism Study a Fraud The British Medical Journal is calling a 1998 study linking three major childhood vaccines to autism an " elaborate fraud. " The study by Dr. Wakefield frightened parents in Britain and elsewhere from giving their children life-saving vaccines against measles, mumps, and rubella. But a report in Thursday's edition of The British Medical Journal says Wakefield and his colleagues altered facts and distorted the data in the study. Wakefield wrote in 1998 that of 12 normal young patients who received shots for three childhood diseases -- measles, mumps, and rubella -- eight developed autism. But a Journal study of the patients' medical records showed that five had previous developmental problems and three never had autism at any time. The British medical magazine Lancet, which published Dr. Wakefield's study, has since retracted it. But millions of parents still refuse to vaccinate their babies because of the fear of a link to autism. It is unclear what motivated Wakefield to allegedly fake his report. British authorities have stripped him of his medical license. He now lives in the United States and some parents of autistic children continue to stand by him. Autism is a behavior disorder in which many of its patients become extremely withdrawn, silent, and engage in repetitive behavior. Its precise cause is unknown. VOA News / Jan. 06, 2011 11:19 KST Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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