The Danish Studies Undermining the CDC’s New Vaccine Information
The CDC acknowledges that countries follow different MMR vaccination schedules, and it is possible that dose timing could affect side effects. However, its website does not mention a newer Danish study involving 657,461 children from 1999–2010. During that period, Denmark revised its MMR schedule by moving the second dose to an earlier age—closer to the U.S. schedule. That study also found no association between the MMR vaccine and autism.
The updated CDC page also cites supplementary tables from a 2025 Danish study of more than one million children, which reported that aluminum exposure “was not associated with increased rates of any of the 50 disorders assessed,” including autism.
This is the same study that RFK Jr. had called to be retracted—something that did not occur. The CDC now notes that some data in the study may warrant further investigation. From hundreds of statistical comparisons, it highlighted one obscure statistic in a supplementary figure suggesting a possible increased risk of Asperger syndrome in a subgroup of more recently born children who received higher levels of aluminum.

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