(Adverse Effects of Pertussis and Rubella Vaccines: A Report of the Committee to Review the Adverse Consequences of Pertussis and Rubella Vaccines)
On the basis of the studies at hand, about 10 percent of SIDS deaths that occur within 1 month after DPT vaccination occur within 3 days of vaccination. If half of these, 5 percent, were caused by DPT, there would be only an even chance of detecting it in the pooled analysis. In his paper prepared for the committee, Walker (1990) estimated that about 20 percent of the 5,000 annual U.S. SIDS deaths occur within 2 weeks of immunization, so perhaps 40 percent, or 2,000, occur within 1 month. A 5 percent increase in this number, 100 cases per year, could go undetected in the data available.
It didn't specifically say which "studies," or maybe I'm not looking hard enough. Maybe the one by Walker in 1987? It has a link to that paper there.
That is it, thank you! Apparently I didn't recall the details correctly. Wonderful to know what I had seen so many years ago. While poking around in the second link you offered this gem was found:
Although there is considerable evidence that a subset of infants has an increased risk of sudden death after receiving vaccines, health authorities eliminated "prophylactic vaccination" as an official cause of death, so medical examiners are compelled to misclassify and conceal vaccine-related fatalities under alternate cause-of-death classifications.
It's likely one of the references listed in this paper:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK234368/
(Adverse Effects of Pertussis and Rubella Vaccines: A Report of the Committee to Review the Adverse Consequences of Pertussis and Rubella Vaccines)
It didn't specifically say which "studies," or maybe I'm not looking hard enough. Maybe the one by Walker in 1987? It has a link to that paper there.
That is it, thank you! Apparently I didn't recall the details correctly. Wonderful to know what I had seen so many years ago. While poking around in the second link you offered this gem was found:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34258234/