No, there really isn't that possibility. The results--the basic facts--reported in Wakefield's anti-MMR paper clearly do not match the clinical records taken during the study. Diagnoses, histories, and descriptions of the children involved were changed. This is, by definition, dishonest.
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No, there really isn't that possibility. The results--the basic facts--reported in Wakefield's anti-MMR paper clearly do not match the clinical records taken during the study. Diagnoses, histories, and descriptions of the children involved were changed. This is, by definition, dishonest.
May 26, 2010 - 4:34pmThis Comment
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