
EXPLAINER: How activists target CDC vaccine tracking system
ABC News
Data from the U.S. Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System is being misrepresented to raise doubts about the shots
Once, getting vaccinated was all but routine. But since the heightened public awareness around the new COVID-19 vaccines, it’s a different story. Now, it means check-ins with family and friends about possible arm soreness or mild symptoms. Through an early warning system known as the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration keep tabs on signals of possible side effects from vaccines. The federal agencies have maintained the system since 1990 as part of a transparent way to ensure vaccine safety. Federal officials are not the only ones keeping an eye on the reports. Over the years, anti-vaccine proponents have seized on the publicly available data to sow doubt about vaccines from falsehoods that they cause autism to even death. But the reporting tool does not offer official proof that the vaccines caused any of the events listed despite what anti-vaccine advocates may say.More Related News