id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-011325-r42hzazp Stowe, Julia Do Vaccines Trigger Neurological Diseases? Epidemiological Evaluation of Vaccination and Neurological Diseases Using Examples of Multiple Sclerosis, Guillain–Barré Syndrome and Narcolepsy 2019-10-01 .txt text/plain 4770 191 40 Even if only based on a temporal sequence of events, it is important that such safety concerns are rapidly investigated with robust epidemiological studies to allow mitigation procedures to be put in place if an association is confirmed or, if unfounded, to have the necessary evidence to sustain public confidence in the vaccination programme without which coverage drops and disease control is lost. The self-controlled case-series method (SCCS) was designed for rapid unbiased assessment in vaccine safety studies using available disease surveillance data that may not be amenable to cohort analysis. As with all vaccine safety studies, but particularly in the case of narcolepsy and Pandemrix™ where the association was completely unexpected, the key to demonstrating causality was consistency of results from well-designed studies in different settings. Risk of narcolepsy after AS03 adjuvanted pandemic A/ H1N1 2009 influenza vaccine in adults: a case-coverage study in England ./cache/cord-011325-r42hzazp.txt ./txt/cord-011325-r42hzazp.txt