How many Black American male children have been harmed by CDC fraud?
How many Black American male children have autism because the CDC covered up its own findings in the 2004 DeStefano et al. paper? At least 350,000.
By Marcella Piper-Terry
Feb 02, 2025
If you are new to the vaccine-autism rabbit hole space, you may not be familiar with the CDC whistleblower. This article will help to inform you about what happened in the early days of this century, beginning with a study that was conducted by the CDC in 2001-2002, and which was published in the journal “Pediatrics” in 2004. The study was conducted for the purpose of discrediting the now infamous “Wakefield study” that is so widely (and wrongly) disparaged in the media by those who have not done any research on the subject, and who wish to stamp out the truth that vaccines absolutely can and do cause autism, and some children are more vulnerable than others when it comes to serious adverse effects of vaccination.
I first wrote this article and published it on VaxTruth on August 26, 2014. For those who are into timelines, that was one year and eight months before VaxXed: From Cover-up to Catastrophe was released and it was eleven months before Representative Bill Posey stood before Congress on July 29, 2015, and literally begged his colleagues to investigate this fraud that has devastated hundreds of thousands of American families and children. An investigation that, now ten years later, is still waiting to happen.User Clip: Posey-CDC-Autism | C-SPAN.org

My article, from August 8, 2014:
If you haven’t heard by now about the biggest news to hit the autism community in a long time, here’s what’s been happening:
Dr. Brian Hooker reanalyzed the CDC’s data and found a statistically significant increase in the risk of autism for children who received the MMR vaccine before 36 months of age. [1]
The increased risk was strongest for Black American males, who were 3.4 TIMES more likely to develop autism when vaccinated with MMR prior to 36 months, compared to matched controls. [1]
There was an increased risk of autism seen across the board for children who received the MMR vaccine prior to 36 months of age. [1]
Dr. Hooker was alerted to this problem by one of the CDC scientists involved in a 2004 study which declared there was no risk of autism based on MMR vaccination prior to 36 months of age. The CDC scientist in question (Dr. William Thompson) is listed as one of the authors on the 2004 paper. Dr. Thompson is now referred to as “the CDC whistleblower.” Dr. Thompson revealed to Dr. Hooker that the CDC researchers knew as early as 2001 about the greatly increased risk to Black American male children, and they intentionally covered it up. [2]
The CDC has released a statement in which they do not deny the increased risk of autism for Black American males vaccinated with the first MMR prior to 36 months of age. [3]
In the CDC’s statement, they basically rationalize the increased incidence by attributing it to a rush on the part of parents of children with autism to vaccinate their children in order to enroll them in special education preschools. In other words, it’s just a coincidence. A claim, by the way, that isn’t the least bit credible. Black American children to this day are diagnosed later than the current average age of diagnosis, which is four, and receive fewer services such as special education preschools. How is it credible then that, back in 2004, there was a mad rush to vaccinate Black American boys by three for special education preschools?
Dr. Hooker’s analysis of the data revealed a Relative Risk (RR) of 3.36 for Black American Male children. The level of Relative Risk was statistically significant at p=0.0019, which means the probability of Dr. Hooker’s findings being by chance was approximately 1 in 1,000.
In research, “p” means probability. When something is “statistically significant” it means a certain level of probability has been demonstrated when the data is analyzed. A p-value of .05 is necessary to consider whether the results are meaningful, or “statistically significant.” A probability of .05 means that you have achieved a 95% assurance that what you are seeing is real and not by chance. A 1 in 1,000 level translates to 999% assurance that what you’re seeing is real and not by chance.
The reanalysis of the data is important because in 2004, a group of researchers from the CDC published a study using the same data, and in their paper, they claimed there was no statistical significance between children with autism and controls (children without autism) based on the timing of the administration of the MMR vaccine. This was a lie. (I know. You’re shocked.)
When it comes to lies about vaccines and autism, the CDC is very good at what they do. Lying liars that lie. As Dr. Hooker has stated so eloquently, “They lied before. Now they’re lying about lying. Where else have they lied?” [5]
And therein lies (pun intended) the real scope of this issue. Where else have they lied, and just how big are the implications of those lies?
How big is this problem?
The 2004 study in question has been cited in 91 additional studies currently listed among the peer-reviewed medical literature on PubMed. Many of the studies in the peer-reviewed literature concerning vaccines, vaccine safety, and the relationship of vaccines and the autism epidemic have been authored by the same researchers involved in the fraudulent 2004 study. The scope of this is enormous. It’s not just one study – this brings into question the validity of the entire body of research on the subject. That body of research is what families, medical professionals and policymakers rely on when making decisions for the health of individual children and recommendations for vaccine policy — things like what vaccines get added to the childhood schedule, and what vaccines are going to be “mandated” for school attendance. That body of research also influences the decisions made for children across the globe. This is not just about one study, and it’s not just about Black American children in Atlanta.
There are a lot of things to discuss about Dr. Hooker’s findings. The first thing is that his findings are not different from the findings of the CDC scientists. That’s right. No difference. The CDC researchers ALSO found that “Children with autism were more likely to be vaccinated before 36 months of age compared to matched controls.” This information was related to the Institute of Medicine (IOM) in 2004, by Dr. Frank DeStefano, in his presentation about the results of the study. [6] (See slides 35 and 39 of the presentation.
slide 35:


slide 39:

Is that confusing to you? It is to me. The principal author of the DeStefano et al. 2004 study told the IOM that children who received MMR vaccine prior to 36 months of age were more likely to receive an autism diagnosis than were their peers who did not receive the MMR vaccine prior to 36 months of age. Yet . . . when the final paper that reported the findings of their research was published in the journal Pediatrics, they left out that little tidbit of information.
So now you are up to date on what’s been happening.
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Let’s go on . . .
With all of the coverage of this important revelation over the last several days, it is daunting for me to figure out what I can contribute that hasn’t already been covered elsewhere. Some who know me have made the observation that I tend to be pretty good with research and with making things make sense for those who are not so well versed in statistics and experimental design. I am a nerd. I like numbers. I also have an insatiable curiosity about why certain things happen the way they do, and that fuels my need to pick things apart. Having said that, I am not perfect and like most people, I make mistakes.
Since this story broke, it has been stated many times (including by me) that the data indicates a 340% increase in the risk of autism for Black American males. 340% is a huge increase. So is 236%, which is actually what we should have been saying. The numbers reported by Dr. Hooker were for Relative Risk. Basically, because the control population has a relative risk of 1.0, the percent increase in risk for the case group is obtained by taking the Relative Risk for the case group (3.36) and subtracting the Relative Risk of the control group (1.0); in this instance, the percent increase for Black American males is 3.36-1.0, or 2.36, which translates to a 236 percent increased risk.
Confused yet? Take a deep breath. It gets better.
So . . . here it is. I’m sorry. We made a mistake. See, CDC? It’s really not that hard to admit when you’ve made a mistake. Thankfully, this error did not go unaddressed for more than 10 years, and thankfully, no children were harmed as a result of our math mistake.
When I realized we had been using the wrong percent increase, I felt a bit ill. My thoughts went to something along the lines of, “Oh crap. We are going to look like a bunch of no-nothing alarmist parents, and this is going to be used against us to say we don’t know what we’re talking about.” Well . . . Why would that scare us? It certainly wouldn’t be anything new.
As I thought more about this, it occurred to me that there are reasons why we would be so eager to believe the number was 340% – or even much higher. Those of us who have experienced vaccine-injury first-hand have lived a million percent increase in what we were led to expect would happen. We were told, “Vaccines are safe. There is no risk of autism from the MMR or any other vaccine.”
As parents who were lied to, and who have watched our children’s health be destroyed by vaccines we were told were “safe,” we certainly may have finely tuned radars when it comes to detecting malicious intent from the CDC.
Many of us have been researching vaccines for a LONG time. We have read the science, and we know this is not an isolated event. Many of us are also living the consequences of the lies that have been perpetuated. As The Thinking Moms’ Revolution’s (TMR) Zorro discussed in her blogpost earlier this week, the institutional gas-lighting and denial of our own observations and reports of our children’s regression and chronic health problems by those who are supposed to protect our children’s health re-traumatizes us on a regular basis. [7]
This is PTSD. It’s trauma. It’s the denial of what has happened to ALL of our children, which makes us have absolutely NO problem in seeing the increased danger to other people’s children. This is what happens when researchers refuse to report the truth. If the truth of the damage is less than what we believe it to be, we are more likely to be able to accept that, if they would only acknowledge that there IS ANY AMOUNT of damage being done to our children.
Let’s not lose sight of what really matters!
A 236% increase is still huge, and none of this changes the fact that the CDC cooked the data and buried the truth. Just as they have done repeatedly in the past, and just as they will continue to do if there is no Official Congressional Inquiry and if those responsible are not held accountable. We want the truth. Our children deserve at least that much.
So, now that the highlights have been covered, and now that the fessing-up is over with, what’s left is to discuss what the numbers really mean, in terms of real children.
How many children are we talking about?
What does a 236% increased risk of autism mean for the population of Black American children? According to the website, stats.org, “A small increase in risk in a large population can result in many deaths” – or in this case, many more cases of autism. [8]
But we aren’t talking about a small increase. We’re talking about a 236% increase for Black American males. Again . . . what does that mean? To figure that out, we need some (more!) statistics. The most recent stats we have on the rate of autism among American children comes from the CDC’s ADDM data. [9]
I know. I can hear the groaning. Let’s start with those numbers and break them down.
The 2014 ADDM report contains information for children who were 8 years old in 2010. The data was gathered from 11 sites in the U.S. I have written before about why the data is problematic, so I won’t go into too much detail about that here. In a nutshell, the 1 in 68 number is a vast underestimate for the following reasons:
By the time the 1 in 68 number was announced, the children in question were 12 years old.
The 11 sites from which the data was gathered only included one state (New Jersey) in the top ten states with the highest autism rates, according to IDEA (educational) data.
According to the CDC’s report, the 2014 ADDM data reveals a 13% yearly increase in the rate of autism, and this yearly increase has been consistent for the last several years. So, when we extrapolate the data down to children who are currently three years of age, a more accurate estimate of the autism rate in America (2014) is 1 in 21 three-year-olds, and 1 in 18 two-year-olds. Anyone who has been in a preschool class recently shouldn’t have any problem believing that.
If we use the CDC’s old, under-reported number of 1 in 68 for the entire U.S. population, that translates to a rate of 14.7 children with autism per 1,000, or 1,470 cases of autism per 100,000 American children.
The next thing we have to do is figure out how many Black American male children there are in the United States. The total number of children (birth to age 18 years) in the U.S. in 2013 was 73,585,872. Black American children comprise 14% of the total population of American children. It should be noted that the 14% number only includes those whose parents identify them as “Black Only,” so the 14% number doesn’t include children of mixed racial heritage. Okay. So, the official number of “Black Only” children in the U.S. (2013) was 10,179,544. [10]
The ratio of black male children to black female children in the U.S. has been fairly consistent since the 1980s, and stands at around 1.03 to 1.0, meaning that for every 1,000 female black children born, there are 1,030 black male children born. [11]
My head is spinning at this point, so for the sake of my own remaining sanity, I’m going to simplify things and say that half of the total of black children born are boys.
Total of Black American children in the United States divided by 2:
10,179,544/2 = 5,089,772 (Black American male children under the age of 18)
Hang in there. We’re in the home stretch . . .
Okay. So, if autism affects 1,470 of every 100,000 children, then a 236% increase (relative risk of 3.36) in autism results in 3,469 additional cases per 100,000 Black American male children. That’s ADDITIONAL cases, so we have to add 1,470+3,469 and we get 4,939 cases of autism per 100,000 Black American male children.
With the total population of Black American male children at approximately 5 million, the total number of Black American male children with autism as a result of increased risk from timely MMR vaccination is estimated at 4,939 x 50 = 246,950 children. (100,000 x 50 = 5,000,000)
250,000 lives. 250,000 families.
At LEAST 250,000 Black American male children could have been spared if the CDC scientists had told the truth when the increased risk was first known to them in 2001. Please remember that this is the number of Black American male children who are CURRENTLY under the age of 18 and does not include any of the children who were over the age of five in 2001. Those victims of the CDC’s deception are no longer considered children, so they are not included in the 250,000 number.
UPDATED Estimate: At LEAST 350,000 Black Male Children…
Watch this video clip from Dr. Brian Hooker and Rizza Islam:
Is this a racial issue? No doubt. Is it JUST a racial issue? No way.
What we know at this point is that the CDC buried the knowledge of a significant increase in the risk of developing autism for Black American male children who received the MMR vaccine according to the CDC’s Recommended Childhood Vaccination Schedule. That one lie is responsible for at least 250,000 cases of autism in Black American male children. And that number is a vast underestimate of the true extent of the damage.
What are the real numbers? My brain can’t handle that today. My heart can’t either.
Black American males are not just more likely to be diagnosed with autism as a result of the MMR vaccine. As those of us with our own vaccine-injured children know, there is an entire continuum of neurological and immune-system damage that can result from vaccines. While preparing this article, I did a little research on other issues facing Black American male children and the picture is not pretty. As one recent article reports, Black American children are far less likely to finish high school, far more likely to be suspended from school, and more likely to suffer language-based learning disabilities than their non-black peers. [12]
Are these other learning and behavioral difficulties among Black American male children also related to vaccine injury? It certainly seems probable. Of course, these are questions that could have been pursued 13 years ago if the CDC hadn’t buried the information. As a result of the CDC’s lies and fraud, we have no way of knowing how much vaccine injury factors into these (or other) issues that plague our country’s young Black males. It is certainly time to change that, and research investigating these issues should be funded and undertaken immediately.
Scientists whose salaries are funded with taxpayer money, and whose research is relied upon for decisions affecting the health of children, should be held to the highest standard of accountability.
The goal of scientific research is not to shut down inquiry. The goal of scientific research is to further inquiry. The shutting down of scientific inquiry by the CDC and other aspects of the government is not unique to the 2004 paper, and it is not unique to the MMR vaccine-autism link.
The cover-up of the evidence of a group of children who were at greatly increased risk of significant harm from the MMR not only denied Black American families the right to make informed decisions about their children’s health care, that cover-up also denied the scientific community the opportunity to design and carry out follow-up studies to find out WHY those children are at increased risk. The answers to those questions could have helped to uncover other groups of children in other areas of the country who may have similar risk factors, including factors that may not be specific to Black American males.
The fraudulent 2004 study identified one particular susceptibility group. If follow-up studies had been done, it is very possible that other susceptibility groups may have been identified.
Bingo. That’s why they covered it up.
Does anyone remember Dr. Bernadine Healy? The former head of the National Institutes of Health? Yeah. That Bernadine Healy.
In a 2008 interview with Sharyl Attkisson, Dr. Healy stated:
This is the time when we do have the opportunity to understand whether or not there are susceptible children, perhaps genetically, perhaps they have a metabolic issue, mitochondrial disorder, immunological issue that makes them more susceptible to vaccines, plural, or to one particular vaccine, or to one component of vaccines, like mercury. So, we now, in these times have to take another look at that hypothesis; not deny it. I think we have the tools today that we didn’t have 10 years ago. That we didn’t have 20 years ago . . . to try and tease that out and find out if there is indeed that susceptible group. Why is that important? A susceptible group does not mean that vaccines aren’t good. What a susceptible group will tell us is that maybe there is a group of individuals or a group of children that shouldn’t have a particular vaccine or shouldn’t have vaccines on the same schedule. I do not believe that if we identified a susceptibility group, that if we identified a particular risk factor for vaccines; or if we found out that they should be spread out a little longer, I do not believe that the public would lose faith in vaccines. It is the job of the public health community and of physicians to be out there and to say, “Yes, we can make it safer because we are able to say, this is a subset and we’re going to deliver it in a way that we think is safer.” I think the government or certain public health officials in the government have been too quick to dismiss the concerns of these families without studying the population that got sick. The public health officials have been too quick to dismiss the hypothesis as irrational, without sufficient studies of causation. I think they have often been too quick to dismiss studies in the animal laboratory, either in mice, in primates, that do show some concerns with regard to certain vaccines and also to the mercury preservative in vaccines. The government has said in a report by the Institute of Medicine . . . in a report in 2004, it basically said, “Do not pursue susceptibility groups. Don’t look for those patients, those children who may be vulnerable.” I really take issue with that conclusion. The reason they didn’t want to look for those susceptibility groups was because they were afraid that if they found them, however big or small they were, that that would scare the public away. First of all, I think the public’s smarter than that. I think the public values vaccines, but more importantly I don’t think you should ever turn your back on any scientific hypothesis because you’re afraid of what it might show. If you read the 2004 report and converse with a few of my colleagues who believe this still to be the case, there is a completely expressed concern that they don’t want to pursue a hypothesis because that hypothesis could be damaging to the public health community at large by scaring people. I don’t believe the truth ever scares people and if it does have a certain edge to it, then that’s the obligation of those who are delivering those facts to do it in a responsible way, so you don’t terrify the public. One never should shy away from science. One should never shy away from getting causality information in a setting in which you can test it. Populations do not test causality; they test associations. You have to go into the laboratory, and you have to do designed research studies, in animals. What we’re seeing is in the bulk of the population vaccines are safe. Vaccines are safe. But there may be the susceptible group. The fact that there is concern that you don’t want to know that susceptible group is a real disappointment to me. If you know that susceptible group, you can save those children. If you turn your back on the notion that there’s a susceptible group that means that you are… what can I say? [13]
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