Andrew Wakefield

Appears in 6 conspiracy theories

Anti-Vaccination Movement
Debunked

Anti-Vaccination Movement

The anti-vaccination movement from its 18th-century origins to the modern era. Examining claims about vaccine safety, the Wakefield fraud, and the evidence.

1796 · United Kingdom
Vaccine–Autism Link
Debunked

Vaccine–Autism Link

The debunked claim that vaccines cause autism, originating from Andrew Wakefield's fraudulent 1998 study. The evidence, the fraud, and the fallout.

1998 · United Kingdom
Mixed

Vaccine Injury Cover-Up

1986 · United States
Debunked

Childhood Vaccine Schedule Overload

The theory that the CDC's recommended childhood vaccine schedule is unnecessarily aggressive, overwhelming infant immune systems and causing chronic conditions — a claim rejected by immunologists and large-scale studies.

2002 · United States
MMR Vaccine & The Wakefield Fraud
Debunked

MMR Vaccine & The Wakefield Fraud

Andrew Wakefield's fraudulent 1998 Lancet study falsely linking the MMR vaccine to autism, its retraction, and the global anti-vaccination movement it spawned.

1998 · United Kingdom
Debunked

Thimerosal / Mercury in Vaccines

The claim that thimerosal (ethylmercury preservative) in vaccines causes autism and neurological damage. Despite massive studies involving millions of children, no causal link has ever been found.

1999 · United States