GENEVA: A new and authoritative analysis released by the World Health Organization (WHO) has once again reaffirmed a conclusion supported by decades of global research: vaccines do not cause autism spectrum disorders (ASD).
The findings come from WHO’s Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety (GACVS), an independent panel of international experts established in 1999 to evaluate vaccine safety issues of global importance. The committee’s latest review, discussed on 27 November 2025, examined an extensive body of scientific evidence accumulated over the past 15 years and beyond.
A comprehensive review of global evidence
The WHO expert group reviewed 31 high-quality primary research studies published between 2010 and August 2025, drawing data from multiple countries and populations. These studies evaluated both childhood vaccines and vaccines administered during pregnancy, with a specific focus on autism spectrum disorders.
In addition, the committee assessed a large nationwide cohort study from Denmark, analyzing registry data covering children born between 1997 and 2018—representing more than two decades of real-world population evidence.
Across all datasets, the conclusion was consistent and unequivocal:
There is no causal association between vaccines and autism.
Addressing long-standing concerns about vaccine ingredients
The review also revisited two components that have historically been at the center of vaccine misinformation:
Thiomersal (ethylmercury):
After reviewing extensive research, GACVS confirmed—again—that thiomersal-containing vaccines are not associated with autism, reaffirming conclusions first reached in 2002, 2004, and 2012.
Aluminum adjuvants:
The committee examined studies published between 1999 and March 2023 evaluating potential health risks of aluminum adjuvants used in some vaccines. The evidence shows no association between the trace amounts of aluminum in vaccines and autism spectrum disorders.
WHO emphasized that aluminum adjuvants have a well-established safety profile and play an important role in enhancing immune response while keeping antigen doses low.
Why this update matters now
Despite overwhelming scientific consensus, vaccine-autism myths continue to circulate globally—often amplified through social media, misinformation networks, and pseudoscientific claims.
WHO officials stress that repeated, transparent reviews like this one are essential to:
- Reinforce public trust in immunization programs
- Support national vaccine policy decisions
- Counter misinformation with high-quality evidence
The organization urged all national health authorities to base immunization policies on the strongest available scientific data, not public fear or unverified claims.
Vaccines: One of humanity’s greatest health achievements
Beyond addressing misinformation, the WHO report places vaccination in its broader historical context.
According to WHO estimates, childhood immunization has saved at least 154 million lives over the past 50 years, making vaccines one of the most successful public health interventions in human history.
By preventing diseases such as measles, polio, tetanus, diphtheria, and whooping cough, vaccines have dramatically reduced childhood mortality, improved life expectancy, and strengthened societies worldwide.
The bottom line from WHO
After reviewing decades of research across continents, populations, and vaccine types, WHO’s message remains clear:
- Vaccines do not cause autism
- Vaccine ingredients, including thiomersal and aluminum, are safe
- Immunization benefits far outweigh any theoretical risks
Public health decisions must be guided by science, not fear
As misinformation continues to evolve, WHO emphasizes that the evidence has not changed, only the platforms spreading doubt have.
