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  1. Feb 28, 1998 · There are no substantiated data to suggest that the MMR vaccine causes autism, enterocolitis, or the syndrome first described by Andrew Wakefield and his colleagues in The Lancet in 1998. New research from some of the same authors as the 1998 Lancet report, in conjunction with a Dublin group led by Prof John O'Leary, has been published early ...

  2. Jan 6, 2011 · Authored by Andrew Wakefield and 12 others, the paper’s scientific limitations were clear when it appeared in 1998. 2 3 As the ensuing vaccine scare took off, critics quickly pointed out that the paper was a small case series with no controls, linked three common conditions, and relied on parental recall and beliefs. 4 Over the following ...

    • Fiona Godlee, Jane Smith, Harvey Marcovitch
    • 2011
  3. Mar 3, 2010 · In a statement published on Feb. 2, the British medical journal said that it is now clear that “several elements” of a 1998 paper it published by Dr. Andrew Wakefield and his colleagues (Lancet 1998;351[9103]:637–41) “are incorrect, contrary to the findings of an earlier investigation.”

    • Laura Eggertson
    • 10.1503/cmaj.109-3179
    • 2010
    • CMAJ. 2010 Mar 9; 182(4): E199-E200.
  4. The Lancet MMR autism fraud centered on the publication in February 1998 of a fraudulent research paper titled "Ileal-lymphoid-nodular hyperplasia, non-specific colitis, and pervasive developmental disorder in children" in The Lancet. [1] The paper, authored by now discredited and deregistered Andrew Wakefield, and twelve coauthors, falsely ...

    • Research linking the measles, mumps and rubella vaccination with autism
  5. Feb 28, 1998 · Nature Medicine 16 , 248 ( 2010) Cite this article. 28 February 1998 Gastroenterologist Andrew Wakefield reports in The Lancet that his team has found a “genuinely new syndrome”—a link ...

  6. Aug 19, 2021 · Efforts to trace the rise of childhood vaccine safety concerns in the US often suggest Andrew Wakefield and colleagues’ retracted 1998 Lancet study (AW98)–which alleged that the MMR vaccine can cause children to develop autism–as a primary cause of US vaccine skepticism. However, a lack of public opinion data on MMR safety collected ...