Study tries to see if child vaccines and asthma are linked

September 27, 2022

A number of scientists have wondered if aluminum, a vaccine additive that has been used for decades, had a role in allergies and asthma in children.

A new federally funded study has found a possible link, but experts say the research has important shortcomings and is not a reason to change current vaccine recommendations. The study doesnā€™t claim aluminum causes the breathing condition, and officials say more work is needed to try to confirm any connection, which hadnā€™t been seen in earlier research.

Even if a link were ever found, the life-saving benefits of the vaccines are still likely to outweigh the asthma risk, said Dr. Matthew Daley, the studyā€™s lead author. But itā€™s possible that if the results are confirmed, it could prompt new work to redesign vaccines, he added.

Dr. Paul Offit, of Childrenā€™s Hospital of Philadelphia, worried that the flawed study will needlessly scare some families away from proven vaccines. ā€œMaking an extraordinary claim requires extraordinary evidence,ā€ Offit said. This study does not offer that kind of evidence, he said.

Read more at AP News.

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