anti-vaccine

The University of California-San Francisco (UCSF) has become a strange place.
There's simply no way of knowing what anti-vaxxer Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. will say on any given day.
I'm about to be a father for the very first time to a beautiful baby girl. So, I'm going to try to write this article as calmly and rationally as possible.
I hate bumperstickers for two reasons: (1) I do not want to know every political opinion held by the people driving in front of me on I-5; and (2) They often boil down extremely complex topics into ridiculously oversimplified mottos.
Like Pig-Pen from Peanuts, a cloud of filth follows Andrew Wakefield wherever he goes.
At first glance, Russian trolls and the activist group Organic Consumers Association seem to have no connection whatsoever. But appearances can be deceiving.
The New York Times has done something that it very rarely does: It wrote an editorial in support of biotechnology.
One of these beliefs is not like the other: The moon landing was faked. 9/11 was an inside job. Vaccines cause autism.
You don't come to this website for (bad) golf tips. Instead, you come here for our take on the latest scientific and consumer issues of the day. Trust us. It's better that way.
Anti-vaxxers insist that measles is just a harmless childhood infection. After the Disneyland outbreak, anti-vaxxers derided public health concerns by referring to it as "Mickey Mouse Measles." The facts indicate otherwise.