Did the CDC remove claim “vaccines don’t cause autism” from website? Fact Check
A rumour claims the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) removed the assertion that vaccines do not cause autism from its website after legal pressure from ICAN (Informed Consent Action Network.
FALSE
ICAN, an anti-vaccination group within the United States, wrote on its website and in an email that due to legal pressure from themselves, the CDC opted to remove its “blanket claim” that vaccines do not cause autism. On its website it uses the headline ”The CDC Finally Capitulated To ICAN’s Legal Demands and Removed the Claim that “Vaccines Do Not Cause Autism” From Its Website!”
The claim is false, and was likely caused by the CDC reformatting its webpage about vaccines and autism.
Previously, the CDC headline on its vaccine page was “Vaccines Do Not Cause Autism”. At some point in the second half of January 2021, this headline was changed to “Autism and Vaccines”. However a subheading directly underneath still read “There is no link between vaccines and autism”.
Since this is essentially making the same claim, there is little reason to suspect that “legal pressure” from ICAN had any bearing in the decision to reformat the webpage.
Sponsored Content. Continued below...
Regardless, this subheading was subsequently changed again and now reads “Vaccines do not cause Autism.”
As such, at the time of writing, the only real change from the original webpage to the current webpage is that the “Vaccines do not cause Autism” sentence has moved from the main heading to the first sub heading.
The CDC’s position still remains that vaccines do not cause autism, and this is still explained clearly on their website, despite ICAN’s purported “victory”.
See the images below to see the changes made.
Continued below...
Thanks for reading, we hope this article helped, but before you leave us for greener pastures, please help us out.
We're hoping to be totally ad-free by 2025 - after all, no one likes online adverts, and all they do is get in the way and slow everything down. But of course we still have fees and costs to pay, so please, please consider becoming a Facebook supporter! It costs only 0.99p (~$1.30) a month (you can stop at any time) and ensures we can still keep posting Cybersecurity themed content to help keep our communities safe and scam-free. You can subscribe here
Remember, we're active on social media - so follow us on Facebook, Bluesky, Instagram and X