Autism and Vaccines By Mrs Vera West

One thing the vaccine establishment are keen on defending, to the death, metaphorically if necessary, as the hill to die upon, is that vaccines do not cause autism. The big vax/autism controversy involved Dr Andrew Wakefield who published a paper alleging a link between various vaccines and autism. That ignited a controversy, where Wakefield became a medical heretic, with all the fringe disadvantages, such as persecution and cancellation, as only the medical technocracy can. He responded to the war waged upon on him in his book, Callous Disregard (2011), which answers his critics.

Now, Covid vax critic Steve Kirsch is turning his attention to the broader question of the safety of vaccines other than the Covid mRNA ones. He asks the simple question, that if vaccines did not trigger autism, then “the number of times a parent notices autistic behaviour BEFORE a wellness visit where a vaccine is given should be comparable to the number of times AFTER the visit.” Surprisingly enough, there have been no scientific studies addressing this question, but Kirsch has conducted a survey where it was found that in a sample of 273 responses to the target question, 58 parents reported first seeing autistic behaviours within a month AFTER a vaccine appointment, and zero parents reported first seeing autistic behaviours within a month BEFORE a vaccine appointment.

As he says, these are stunning results from a statistical perspective, and the odds of these being by chance, and not causal, are infinitesimal. Clearly, there needs to be research conducted on this, but getting research results published would be even more difficult than getting Covid vax critique material published. It challenges the very foundations of the vaccine faith. Still, Kirsch has he money to finance the research.

https://stevekirsch.substack.com/p/how-can-i-be-so-sure-that-vaccines

“If vaccines aren’t triggering autism, then the number of times a parent notices autistic behaviors BEFORE a wellness visit where a vaccine is given should be comparable to the number of times AFTER the visit.

I asked 642 parents who had previously reported having an autistic child in previous surveys to fill out my survey. I received 273 responses.

58 parents reported first seeing autistic behaviors within a month AFTER a vaccine appointment.

0 parents reported first seeing autistic behaviors within a month BEFORE a vaccine appointment.

This is stunning. It is highly unlikely you’ll get a disparity like this if vaccines aren’t triggering autism. It’s about the same as the chance of throwing a fair coin 58 times and getting all heads: 1 chance in 2.8e17 which is about as close to impossible as you will ever find in nature.

But the more stunning thing is that no autism researcher in the world has ever even thought to ask such a question. Ever.

In nearly 100 years, there are no papers in the scientific literature that have ever looked at this. Zero. Zip. Nada.

If I’m wrong, nearly every pediatrician in the world should have roughly even stats for # cases within 1 month before a vaccine appointment vs. 1 month after a vaccine appointment.

All you have to do is name one pediatrician who has more autism reports from parents 1 month before the child’s vaccination visit vs. 1 month after the child’s vaccination visit. Just one.

If vaccines don’t cause autism, then half the pediatricians in the world should have statistics that satisfy the challenge.

The fact that nobody can name a single pediatrician in the world that meets the challenge tells you everything you need to know, doesn’t it?

Surveys on Facebook autism support groups

I’ve been told that it is absolutely forbidden to do a survey like this on any Facebook support group. I tried to do such a survey and they wouldn’t even let me into the group. My membership request is still “pending.”

These groups will all kick you out if you go against “the science.”

Your survey will be immediately taken down.

So you’re not allowed to ask this question, unfortunately.

They don’t want to know the truth.

Nobody wants to know the data.

Doctors treating autism don’t want to know when it occurred relative to the shot.

Few doctors will actually ask the parents when they noticed the first symptoms of ASD and put this in their medical records.

Researchers looking into finding the cause of autism don’t want to know this either apparently. I talked to a top autism researcher at MIT and this person had no clue. Nor was he/she interested in exploring the topic any further.

Validating my survey: stats from a retired pediatrician who can speak freely.

Doug Hulstedt, a former pediatrician, told me that in his practice, he saw over 150 autistic kids.

He said that 74 of those cases were absolutely caused by the vaccine and 44 cases happened within 1 month after vaccination.

He said 0 cases happened within a month BEFORE vaccination.

So my survey wasn’t biased at all.”

 

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Thursday, 25 April 2024

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