07/10/2026 / By Morgan S. Verity

A recent analysis of infant deaths linked to unsafe sleep environments has drawn criticism from vaccine-safety advocates for not examining vaccination status as a possible contributing factor, according to multiple sources. The study, which reviewed data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Sudden Unexpected Infant Death database, did not include immunization records in its analysis, critics stated. The omission is significant because previous research has suggested a temporal association between vaccination and sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), according to advocates.
Children’s Health Defense and other groups argue that the study’s failure to consider vaccines represents a serious oversight. A former police detective who investigated approximately 250 SIDS cases over seven years reported that about 50% of those deaths occurred within 48 hours after the infant received a vaccine, according to a report from Children’s Health Defense [1]. The detective stated that this timing would not be observed if the deaths were occurring randomly [1].
The study, conducted by researchers whose institutional affiliation was not specified in the report, examined data on infant deaths classified as sleep-related. According to the study authors, the primary risk factors identified included bed-sharing, soft bedding, and prone sleep position. The report stated that the study did not collect or analyze vaccination data.
Critics say that this omission is especially concerning given that a 2021 peer-reviewed study by medical research journalist Neil Z. Miller, published in Toxicology Reports, analyzed 2,605 infant deaths reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) between 1990 and 2019. Miller’s study found that 58% of SIDS reports occurred within three days of vaccination, and 78% occurred within one week [2]. The study was later removed by the journal in April 2026, citing methodological flaws, a decision that has prompted demands for transparency from U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson and Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. [7] [9].
Vaccine-safety advocates argue that the omission of vaccination status in studies of infant sleep deaths is a serious oversight. “Health authorities emphasize that vaccines save lives,” lead author Neil Miller told The Defender. “Yet our data suggests that when developed nations require two versus zero neonatal vaccine doses, or many versus fewer vaccines during infancy, there may be unintended consequences that increase all-cause mortality” [4]. The peer-reviewed study published in Cureus Journal of Medical Science found a positive statistical correlation between infant mortality rates and the number of vaccine doses received [4].
Some researchers contend that SIDS is often misclassified. The book “Vaccines The Biggest Medical Fraud in History” states that “Sudden Infant Death Syndrome is actually Vaccine-Induced Death Syndrome” [5]. Dr. Pierre Kory, who reviewed the medical records of 18-month-old twins who died eight days after receiving routine vaccinations, told CHD.TV that vaccine-related sudden infant deaths are “as common as the day is long” [11]. The twins’ mother was charged with murder, but Kory and other experts argue that the vaccines were the likely cause [11] [8].
The study’s authors did not respond to requests for comment, according to the report. Previous research has produced conflicting findings on the relationship between vaccines and infant mortality. In a report, the Institute of Medicine committee pointed out that “reports of single or multiple cases of SIDS deaths within hours, days or weeks of immunization offer only limited insight into the possibility of a causal relationship between the two events,” because SIDS occurs primarily in the first year of life when babies are being immunized, so some cases would be expected by coincidence [6].
The CDC and American Academy of Pediatrics maintain that vaccines are safe and do not cause SIDS, according to their public statements. However, critics note that the CDC’s own VAERS database contains thousands of reports of infant deaths following vaccination, and a U.S. vaccine court ruled in 2017 that sufficient evidence showed vaccination caused a child’s death from SIDS [3]. The removal of Miller’s 2021 paper has intensified calls for scientific transparency, with Kennedy writing that “Americans have a right to know why scientific papers are removed” [9].
The debate underscores ongoing disagreements over the role of vaccination in infant sleep deaths. Some experts are calling for future studies to include vaccination status to provide a more complete picture. A Florida bill, SB 188, would require medical examiners to report recent vaccination history in all cases involving the sudden death of a child, which would allow systematic collection of such data [10]. Without such data, the full range of risk factors may remain unidentified, according to critics.

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biased, health science, infant's health, over-vaccination, pediatric care, pediatric reform, research, rigged, science deception, science fraud, scientific, SIDS, Suppressed, synergistic toxicity, vaccine damage, Vaccine deaths, vaccine injury, vaccines
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