In 1998, Andrew Wakefield published a paper, now retracted, in The Lancet confirming a link between the Measles, Mumps, and Rubella combined vaccine (MMR) and autism. Wakefield’s research was found to be fraudulent in numerous ways including information he disclosed to The Lancet, details about the participants in the study, and the funding for this research. Brian Deer, a journalist with publications in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), posted numerous articles exposing the truth behind Andrew Wakefield’s research and findings. In one of Brian Deer’s articles in the BMJ, How the case against the MMR vaccine was fixed, he addresses the fact that there were only 12 participants in Wakefield’s study and only one of the participants was a girl. Deer and an article published by the Canadian Medical Association both stated that the participants were selected through children already involved in lawsuits against the MMR vaccine.
The Lancet released a statement from its’ editors that also addresses that the children in the study were specifically invited to the study. These families had already shown interests or had been involved in campaigns against the MMR vaccine. The Lancet editors’ statement includes that evidence found in Wakefield’s study was found to be funded by lawyers and used by these lawyers in cases against MMR vaccine manufacturers. The American Psychiatric Association has addressed in this article that no further studies have found any environmental links to autism let alone any connections of the MMR vaccine to autism. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) also provides links to 5 other articles that find no correlation between the MMR vaccine and autism in this infographic.
David Elliman and Helen Bedford published an article in the US National Library of Medicine in the Archives of Disease in Childhood about the global responses to the MMR vaccine after Wakefield’s article. This article states that the uptake of the MMR vaccine was at 92% in the UK and the dropped to 79% after Wakefield’s publication. The Medical Journal of Australia published an article that supported this data and also discussed an increase in measles infections in the UK that started in 2002. This article states that the vaccination rates have remained stable in Australia most likely because the UK had more media coverage of the paper and the incident. An article published in Global Pediatric Health Journal discusses the measles outbreak in 2019 in the US, Philippines, Ukraine, Venezuela, Brazil, Italy, France, and Japan. Anti-vaccinations groups still use Wakefield’s paper as evidence and this is influencing measles outbreaks around the world as vaccination rates are lower than in 1998 and declining. This information is extremely important because a disease outbreak is extremely hard to control and these diseases can cause death. Also, falsified research is extremely scary for the public to find because it then reduces the public’s trust of future research. Even after over 20 years since Wakefield’s publication, there are still those who believe his research is true and this impacts global health on a massive scale. There have been so many more research studies that do not find any correlation and Wakefield’s one study has had huge ramifications.