| COPENHAGEN, DENMARK -- A  new Danish study finds no association between aluminum in childhood  vaccines and 50 different health conditions, including autism, asthma,  and autoimmune diseases. The findings reaffirm the safety of Denmark’s  childhood vaccination program.
 An extensive new Danish register-based study - the largest of its  kind - supports the safety of the national childhood immunization  program. Analyzing data from over 1 million children, the study found no  increased risk of autism, asthma, or autoimmune diseases in vaccinated  children.
 
 “Our results are reassuring. By analyzing data from more than one  million Danish children, we found absolutely no indication that the  very small amount of aluminum used in the childhood vaccination program  increases the risk of 50 different health outcomes during childhood,”  says Anders Hviid, Head of Department at Statens Serum Institut (SSI)  and principal investigator on the study.
 
 Aluminum, used as an adjuvant to enhance the immune response, has been a component in some vaccines since the 1930s.
 
 Researchers from SSI used Denmark’s unique national health  registers to follow children born between 1997 and 2018, investigating  the associations between aluminum-containing vaccines and a total of 50  health outcomes - including asthma, allergies, autoimmune conditions,  and neurodevelopmental disorders.
 
 “This is the first study of this scale and with such  comprehensive analyses, and it confirms the strong safety profile of the  vaccines we’ve used for decades in Denmark,” says Anders Hviid.
 
 The results are being published at a time of heightened  international debate about vaccine safety which makes the Danish study  highly relevant.
 
 “In an era marked by widespread misinformation about vaccines, it  is crucial to rely on solid scientific evidence. Large,  population-based register studies like this one - tracking more than a  million children over many years - are a bulwark against the  politicization of health science which undermines public trust in  vaccines. It is absolutely essential to distinguish real science from  politically motivated campaigns - otherwise, it is the children who will  end up paying the price,” says Anders Hviid.
 
						
						
 
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