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West Coast States Rebuke CDC’s Autism Language, Reaffirm Vaccine Safety

The alliance says public guidance must rest on established evidence to prevent confusion and maintain trust.

Overview

  • The West Coast Health Alliance of California, Washington, Oregon and Hawaii formally restated that vaccines do not cause autism, directly countering the CDC webpage revision made in November.
  • On or about Nov. 19, the CDC changed its vaccine-safety page to say the claim that vaccines do not cause autism is not evidence-based because studies have not ruled out a possible infant association.
  • HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. directed the messaging shift, pledged funding for new vaccine–autism studies and installed Dr. Ralph Abraham, criticized for vaccine-skeptical positions, as CDC principal deputy.
  • Major medical and autism groups, including the American Medical Association and the Autism Science Foundation, denounced the change and warned it could undermine confidence in immunization.
  • Debate continues as some commentators call the update a move toward scientific precision, while extensive epidemiological research cited by critics has repeatedly found no causal link between vaccines and autism.