She currently works as a lawyer at the international law firm Arnold & Porter LLC. Her career in philosophy, biology and politics, her experience as a lawyer and legal editor as well as contemporary issues gave the credibility necessary for her writing articles. "Immunization against evil science: vaccine court and autism test case" is the only published article by Hartlein. She did not publish any other work on this topic and did not do any other research on vaccination. It may be controversial as her conclusion in the article is reasonable.
Vaccines do not cause autism. This is the ruling of each of the three major test cases announced by the Federal Claims Court of Washington, DC on February 12. After 10 years of speculation, controversy and analysis - both sides are filled with sarcasm - the court is between the vaccine combination of MMR vaccine and thimerosal (mercury based preservative) and autism spectrum related disease spectrum Please deny any combination in particular. However, although these judgments seem unmistakable, we have not made much effort to alleviate the anger of discussions that have serious consequences for US public health.
Abstract: This was a retrospective case-control study conducted in Poland and there was no correlation between autism and single measles vaccine or trivalent MMR vaccine. Indeed, it seems to have preventive effect. In other words, the incidence of autism among vaccinated people is low. This may be the result of random results or unknown confusion. However, this study did not reflect the increased risk of autism in people vaccinated with both vaccines. Abstract: This group-based study investigated whether there is a relationship between the incidence of autism and MMR vaccination in Northeast Thames. The study confirmed that the prevalence of autism increased, but this increase was not related to the introduction of MMR or vaccination. There was no association between the MMR vaccine and the diagnosis age of autism
Researchers studied the diagnostic morbidity or age-related trends associated with the introduction of MMR vaccines in the UK in 1988. This study has confirmed 498 autistic children born in the UK since 1979 (261 core autism, 166 atypical autism, 71 people with Asperger's syndrome). After the birth of MMR vaccination, the number of cases in birth year is steadily increasing. There is no sudden "upgrade" or trend line change. There was no difference in age at diagnosis between cases vaccinated 18 months ago or later and those not receiving vaccination. There was no temporal correlation between onset of autism within 1 to 2 years after MMR vaccination. Within months after vaccination, developmental regression did not come together