-
A UK lawyer, Richard Barr, secured funding from the Legal Aid Board to pursue a class action suit against manufacturers of MMR vaccine.
-
Legal Aid Board gives £55,000 to Wakefield and Barr to study possible links between the MMR vaccine and autism
-
Wakefield and 12 others publish "Ileal-lymphoid-nodular hyperplasia, non-specific colitis, and pervasive developmental disorder in children" in The Lancet. In an accompanying press release. Wakefield is quoted to have said "The study has identified a possible link between gut disorders in children and autism. In the majority of cases onset of symptoms occurred soon after the MMR vaccination."
-
The Lancet publishes a study entitled ""Autism and measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine: no epidemiological evidence for a causal association," which contradicts Wakefield's original hypothesis.
-
From 1997 to 2001, UK vaccination rates dropped from 92% to 87%, following a loss in confidence in the MMR vaccine, and the Daily Mail reports of the threat of a measles outbreak.
-
Brian Deer, a journalist working for the Sunday Times, publishes the findings of his investigation into Andrew Wakefield. The full extant of his report can be found on his website
-
full text10 of Wakefield's coauthors, upon learning the results of Deer's investigation, publish a retraction of the Interpretation of their article. Part of the retraction is avaiable from the Lancet website. Deer's webiste contains the
-
Institute of Medicine publishes a review of immunization safety, in which they did not find evidence of an autism-vaccine link. The report is available from their website
-
Panel of Special Masters (who make decision in Vaccine Court, part of the US Federal Court of Claims system) began to hear three cases, in which parents claimed that the MMR vaccine caused autism in their children, and sought compensation, under the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Act. The first three test cases tested whether the MMR vaccine caused autism.
-
The full story is available here
-
Jenny McCarthy appears on Oprah on a segment entitled "Mothers Battle Autism," claiming that her son's autism was caused by the MMR vaccine he received. The story is available on Oprah's website.
-
Decisions in Cedillo v. HHS, Hazlehurst v. HHS, Snyder v. HHS released. In all three cases, the court found that the parents' theories on how the MMR vaccine caussd their childrens' autism were not sufficient to merit compensation.
-
The editors fully retract Wakefield's 1998 article, writing "it has become clear that several elements of the 1998 paper by Wakefield et al. are incorrect." The full text of the retraction.
-
Decisions in Dwyer v HHS, King v HHS, and Mead v HHS released. In all three cases, the court found that the parents' theories on how thimerosal-containing vaccines caussd their childrens' autism were not sufficient to merit compensation.
-
The British General Medical Council, after investing Wakefield, find him guily of "serious professional misconduct."Their full decision is availablehere