The Amish are a perfect example of a large group of people who are largely unvaccinated,” testified @stkirsch to the Pennsylvania State Senate.
“You won’t find kids with ADD, with autoimmune disease, with PANDAS, PANS, with epilepsy. You just don’t find any of these chronic diseases in the Amish.”
“The US government has been studying the Amish for decades, but there’s never been a report out to the public,” @stkirsch denoted.
“After decades of studying the Amish, there’s no report because the report would be devastating to the narrative. It would show that the CDC has been harming the public for decades and saying nothing and burying all the data.
Your techboomerbro just made up a bunch of .
Numerous studies have been done comparing autism rates between vaccinated and unvaccinated children. No difference has been found.
One study from Japan looked at the MMR vaccine, which was withdrawn from the country due to concerns about aseptic meningitis. In that study, a statistically significant number of children were found to have developed autism even though they had not received the MMR vaccine.7
Another study published in the February 2014 issue of the journal Autism found, "the rates of autism spectrum disorder diagnosis did not differ between immunized and non-immunized younger sib groups."8
One 2018 study reported in JAMA Pediatrics aimed to determine vaccination patterns of children with and without autism, as well as those of their younger siblings.9
The researchers determined that the children who had autism and their younger siblings had higher rates of being un- or under-vaccinated.
This, the study authors note, suggests that these children are at higher risk for vaccine-preventable diseases. So, while there is no proven benefit of avoiding vaccines in terms of autism prevention, this research highlights a proven danger of doing so.9
Zerbo O, Modaressi S, Go
https://www.verywellhealth.com/unvac...autism-2633214
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