Vaccines and SIDS

Conspiracy theory From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A speculated link between vaccines and SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome) has been refuted,[1] but remains a common anti-vaccine claim.[2] The claim, attributed to Robert Mendelsohn in 1991[3][non-primary source needed] and promoted by anti-vaccination activists such as Viera Scheibner in the early 1990s, is that vaccines, especially the DTP vaccine that protects against diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis, sometimes causes sudden infant death syndrome. The World Health Organization has classified this as a "common misconception".[4]

ClaimsVaccines are claimed to cause sudden infant death syndrome
Year proposed1991
Original proponentsAttributed to Robert Mendelsohn
Subsequent proponentsViera Scheibner, Kelly Brogan
Quick facts Claims, Year proposed ...
Vaccines and SIDS
ClaimsVaccines are claimed to cause sudden infant death syndrome
Year proposed1991
Original proponentsAttributed to Robert Mendelsohn
Subsequent proponentsViera Scheibner, Kelly Brogan
(Overview of pseudoscientific concepts)
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Some also claim that a vaccine court case, Boatmon v. Secretary of Health and Human Services, 13-611 (Fed. Cl. 2017), proves this link. While compensation was awarded to Boatmon, this did not prove any link,[5] and the award was in any case vacated in July 2018 as the Special master had applied too low a standard of proof.[6]

Multiple studies and meta-analyses have shown that vaccinated children are less likely to die of SIDS.[7]

References

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