Skip to content Skip to main menuHome › No Long-Term Studies All links on this page provide information on vaccines that do not currently have any long-term studies:
- Inadequate Vaccine Safety Research and Conflicts of Interest The following is a sampling of studies that have not been done: Safety of simultaneous vaccination vs. placebo; Mixing of vaccine adjuvants (for example, thimerosal and aluminum); Follow up study of the higher rate of seizures from MMRV vs. MMR. Source: Elizabeth Brit Center for Autism Law & Advocacy
- Vaccines — Are the Safety Studies Credible? When independent research scientists come up with results that are completely at odds with industry-funded studies, the results of their studies often never reach the light of day for several reasons. Source: Erica Elliott
- New Evidence Demolishes Claims of Safety and Effectiveness of HPV Vaccine A systematic review of pre- and post-licensure trials of the HPV vaccine shows that its effectiveness is not only overstated (through the use of selective reporting or “cherry picking” data) but also completely unproven. Source: Mercola
- Inadequate safety studies They do completely inadequate safety studies, if they do any at all, of a few weeks which is no where near long enough. And they are conducted by the makers! Source: WHALE
- The 'vaccines are adequately tested' lie If vaccines were properly tested their ineffectiveness and danger would be obviously apparent, so it's never going to happen. "Testing" is carried out by the makers only! No long term tests have ever been done, (they are doing them now on the whole population), no vaccine has ever been tested against 100% unvaccinated children, and using the Antibody Theory to test effectiveness is junk science! Source: WHALE
- 'Vaccine Safety Commission’: 50 studies the AAP failed to send President Trump The committee's assessment of the significance of concerns about possible immune system dysfunctions as a result of multiple immunizations took several factors into account: the burden of the possible adverse outcomes of autoimmune diseases such as type 1 diabetes and allergic diseases such as asthma; indications of the extent of the concern about multiple immunizations; and views regarding the framework for immunization policy-making. Source: J.B. Handley
- Vaccine Safety: Current and Future Challenges An example of this potential impact can been seen in recent concerns that polio vaccine contaminated by simian virus 40 may have been received by millions of people during the 1950's. Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- Vaccine Safety & Big Pharma Issues Here is an excellent rebuttal to "vaccines are safe and effective." Source: Vaxxed The Movie
- Unintended events following immunization with MMR: a systematic review Public debate over the safety of the trivalent measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine and the drop in vaccination rates in several countries persists despite its almost universal use and accepted effectiveness. We carried out a systematic review to assess the evidence of unintended effects (beneficial or harmful) associated with MMR and the applicability of systematic reviewing methods to the field of safety evaluation. Source: Reparto Epidemiologia Clinica, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy
- Vaccines for measles, mumps and rubella in children The design and reporting of safety outcomes in MMR vaccine studies, both pre- and post-marketing, are largely inadequate. The evidence of adverse events following immunisation with the MMR vaccine cannot be separated from its role in preventing the target diseases. Source: Cochrane Vaccines Field, Azienda Sanitaria Locale ASL AL,Alessandria, Italy
- Immunization Safety Review: Multiple Immunizations and Immune Dysfunction Immunization to protect infants and children from vaccine-preventable diseases is one of the greatest achievements of public health. Immunization is not without risks, however. It is well established, for example, that the oral polio vaccine can on rare occasion cause paralytic polio, that some influenza vaccines have been associated with a risk of Guillain-Barré syndrome, and that vaccines sometimes produce anaphylactic shock. Thus public concern about the safety of immunizations has increased. Source: Institute of Medicine (US) Immunization Safety Review Committee