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In spite of evidence to the contrary, Rizza Islam claims that the MMR vaccine is used for depopulation

Posted on:  2019-10-31

Key takeaway

The MMR vaccine does not reduce fertility nor does it cause increased mortality. The vaccine also saves lives. All three facts taken together show that the MMR vaccine would actually encourage population growth by counteracting depopulation processes.

Reviewed content

Incorrect

The World Health Organization is still pushing this [vaccine] depopulation agenda throughout Africa

Source: Sway’s Universe, Rizza Islam, 2019-10-19

Verdict detail

Inadequate support: No scientific evidence exists to support the claim that the MMR vaccine is used for depopulation. In fact, all the evidence points to the implausibility of using the vaccine for depopulation.

Full Claim

The World Health Organization is still pushing this [vaccine] depopulation agenda throughout Africa

Review

This video, published in October 2019, went viral on Facebook in the same month and has received at least 3,000 shares and 52,000 views. The video shows an interview in which Rizza Islam claims that the MMR vaccination program in Africa is part of a “depopulation agenda”.

For something to cause depopulation, it must reduce the birth rate and/or increase mortality rates. Firstly, no evidence exists to support the notion that the MMR vaccine reduces fertility. Secondly, there is also no evidence showing that the MMR vaccine leads to death. While many have claimed that data from the US Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) is proof to the contrary, it is important to keep in mind that VAERS only tracks deaths occurring after vaccination – on its own, the data does not imply that the MMR vaccine caused the deaths.

The MMR vaccine has been found to be safe and effective. In fact, the vaccine saves lives – the latest findings from a 2019 study on the measles vaccination campaign in India also back this up, reporting that “the campaign averted up to 41,000–56,000 deaths during 2010–13, or 39–57% of the expected deaths nationally”[1]. Additionally, the vaccine also protects people from potentially disabling conditions, such as measles encephalitis, which occurs in a small subset (0.1%) of measles cases, as well as potentially life-threatening infections arising from measles-induced immunosuppression[2,3,4].

Historical observations show how measles infection resulted in widespread death and depopulation during “virgin soil epidemics” (e.g. during Christopher Columbus’ expedition to the New World)[5,6], something that could have been prevented if the measles vaccine had been available then. All these facts show that the MMR vaccine would prevent depopulation, not cause it.

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We previously reviewed claims about the MMR vaccine, which were found to be mostly accurate, inaccurate or incorrect:

REFERENCES

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