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Tag: Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

  • Kennedy sharpens vaccine attacks, without scientific backing

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    As the federal government prepares for the next meeting of its Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has intensified his attacks on aluminum vaccine components used in many shots to boost the body’s immune response.

    Kennedy, a longtime anti-vaccine activist before seeking public office, claims that aluminum adjuvants are neurotoxic and tied to autism, asthma, autoimmune disease, and food allergies.

    But science and medicine advances a different view. Strong recommendations that parents introduce peanut-containing foods to infants early, for instance, have led to a drop in the incidence rate of peanut allergies.

    Since taking office, Kennedy has ordered reviews of vaccine ingredients, citing aluminum as a top concern. A discussion of “adjuvants and contaminants” is on the vaccine advisory panel’s draft agenda.

    A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention webpage that for years has assured the public vaccines do not cause autism was updated Nov. 19 with new language stating that studies have not definitively ruled out a link between vaccines and autism.

    He has also targeted scientists who have published studies showing aluminum adjuvants are safe. In August, Kennedy denounced a large Danish study finding no link between aluminum in vaccines and childhood disease, calling it a “deceitful propaganda stunt” and demanding its retraction. The Annals of Internal Medicine rejected the claim and refused to retract the study.

    And, regarding the upcoming advisory panel meeting, HHS spokesperson Emily HIlliard said ACIP “is independently reviewing the full body of evidence on adjuvants and other vaccine components to ensure the highest safety standards.”

    The stakes are high because Kennedy’s push to cast doubt on aluminum isn’t just about the ingredient itself. It’s part of a broader strategy to foster uncertainty about vaccine safety and lay the groundwork to challenge the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, which drug manufacturers say is essential to ensure a stable market for shots.

    But researchers across infectious diseases, immunology, pediatrics, and epidemiology say the data is clear: Aluminum adjuvants are safe.

    “Aluminum is the third most common element on the Earth’s surface,” said Dr. Paul Offit, a pediatrician and director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. “So we’re all exposed to aluminum all the time. The water that we drink has aluminum in it. The food that we eat has aluminum in it.”

    Vaccines add only a tiny amount of aluminum to the body — a combined total of about 8 milligrams — after the schedule of childhood vaccines is complete. Offit said that over the first 18 years of life, people naturally take in about 400 milligrams of aluminum from everyday sources.

    “I don’t know why there is so much concern,” said Dr. Rajesh Gupta, a former FDA vaccine scientist. “Aluminum gets distributed in the body everywhere. It is ultimately excreted by the kidneys in the urine. So, it is not that aluminum stays in the body.”

    How they work

    The aluminum in vaccines isn’t foil or metal. It’s a compound of aluminum salts, such as aluminum hydroxide or aluminum phosphate, that help the vaccine work better.

    It’s a bit like zinc in cold tablets: Patients don’t swallow chunks of metal, instead ingesting a zinc salt that dissolves safely in the body.

    In vaccines, these aluminum salts give the immune system an extra nudge so it learns to recognize the target germ more effectively.

    When injected, the vaccine stays near the injection site and causes mild, short-lived inflammation that summons immune cells. Those cells pick up the vaccine antigen, a harmless piece of a virus or bacterium, and carry it to nearby lymph nodes. There, the adjuvants show it around like a wanted poster so the body can identify and destroy the germ quickly.

    Dr. Harm HogenEsch, a professor of immunopathology at the Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine, said that aluminum adjuvants work only when they’re injected in the same spot as the vaccine ingredient they’re meant to boost, to help nearby immune cells learn to recognize the germ. If the two shots are given in different places, he said, “you don’t see that effect.”

    In response to Kennedy’s claims, scientists say that anything that acts as an adjuvant can, in principle, also boost an allergic response. But that doesn’t mean aluminum-adjuvanted vaccines are turning children into food-allergic time bombs. Antigens in vaccines such as the hepatitis B surface antigen or HPV proteins are not allergens, and no food proteins are put into vaccines.

    Animal experiments

    Animal studies form the basis of Kennedy’s claim that aluminum adjuvants in vaccines can create allergies. In these experiments, scientists deliberately sensitize rats or mice by injecting them with a food protein mixed with aluminum. The aluminum strengthens the immune response, but it does not cause an allergy by itself.

    “That’s the basis for a lot of the experimental mouse models, where you inject a food allergen with an aluminum adjuvant to sensitize the mice,” HogenEsch said. “I’m not aware of any food antigen being included in vaccines, and so I don’t really see a way by which this could happen.”

    Dr. Ross Kedl, a professor of immunology and microbiology at the University of Colorado Anschutz School of Medicine, went further, noting that there is no plausible route for vaccines to create a peanut allergy out of thin air. “Someone would have had to mix peanut proteins in with the actual vaccine prior to injection.”

    Dr. Stefan H. E. Kaufmann, director emeritus at the Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology in Berlin, said results from mice often don’t match what happens in people, because “mice are much easier to push into allergic reactions than humans.” In other words, what looks dramatic in a rodent study doesn’t automatically apply to human immune systems.

    And in this case, it’s “important to distinguish between how aluminum behaves in lab animals versus people,” Kaufmann said.

    Human studies

    Beyond animal models and theoretical scenarios, scientists have looked hard for signals of harm in large human datasets.

    In 2023, a study by the Vaccine Safety Datalink, a collaboration coordinated by the CDC, reported a slight increase in asthma among children with higher aluminum exposure before age 2, but the association disappeared in further analyses.

    “That paper was roundly criticized,” Offit said. “When they controlled for breastfeeding, the association between asthma and receipt of aluminum-adjuvant-containing vaccines disappeared.”

    “It should have never been published,” he said.

    Dr. Kathy Edwards, professor emerita of pediatrics at Vanderbilt University, said that false signals are common when large databases are mined for dozens of outcomes.

    “When you look at a hundred different things, just by the law of percentages, some of those may look like there is a signal,” she said. “The whole RFK Jr. assessment is really prone to cherry-picking,” she said, adding that “there does need to be some kind of basic understanding of statistics for people to interpret this.”

    Soon after the 2023 U.S. findings drew attention, scientists at the CDC contacted Dr. Anders Hviid, head of epidemiology research at the Statens Serum Institut in Copenhagen, Denmark, to see whether his team could replicate the work.

    “It makes perfect sense to try to replicate findings of any kind in different data sources,” Hviid said.

    Hviid’s nationwide Danish study followed 1.2 million children over two decades, using linked national health registries that record every vaccination and diagnosis.

    “Our health care system is quite egalitarian. It’s free, and there’s universal access. And everyone is in these nationwide registers,” he said. Their findings: no increased risk of these conditions associated with increasing amounts of aluminum received through the vaccines.

    Rare bumps

    Doctors have documented one genuine reaction to aluminum adjuvants: itchy nodules at the injection site, called “pruritic granulomas.” These small bumps are so rare that most allergists and pediatricians will never see a single case.

    This reaction “doesn’t lead to something bad, and it really isn’t associated with anything other than that local irritation,” Edwards said.

    Researchers believe these bumps represent a localized immune response — meaning only in the area of the injection, not a body-wide allergy — that is very different from the kind of immediate allergic reaction people treat with antihistamines. These include the reactions driven by food or beestings, when histamine, the body’s own alarm signal, floods the system within minutes and causes hives, swelling, or breathing trouble. Kedl said that distinction often gets lost in public debate.

    Eliminating aluminum adjuvants

    For many experts, the real issue is not just whether aluminum is safe but what happens to the entire vaccine program if aluminum adjuvants are stripped out. For many modern vaccines that rely on a single purified protein — such as those for diphtheria and tetanus toxoids, hepatitis B, and HPV — adjuvants are crucial.

    Edwards said that simply swapping in a different adjuvant isn’t realistic.

    “They’re kind of all built on one another,” she said. Once a vaccine has been proved to work and become the standard of care, new or updated versions are generally no longer tested against a placebo in people who should be getting that vaccine. Instead, they’re tested against the existing product, which means each approval rests on the one before it.

    Core childhood vaccines would probably have to be reformulated, and large clinical trials would have to be repeated to prove the new products are safe and effective. Meanwhile, production gaps and shortages would have to be managed, potentially for years, while manufacturers and regulators start over — all while diseases such as whooping cough, hepatitis B, and HPV-related cancers gain more room to spread.

    “The aluminum adjuvants have sort of hit the sweet spot in terms of being effective at inducing a robust antibody response that is protective for those vaccines in which they’re being used and being very safe,” HogenEsch said. “It would be quite frankly foolish to try to eliminate them.”

    A century of safe use

    The DTaP, hepatitis B, and HPV vaccines all contain aluminum adjuvants and have been in use for nearly a century. Large-scale studies show no link between aluminum and systemic allergic disease.

    “We have had aluminum adjuvants in vaccines for decades,” Edwards said. “I have grandchildren. My grandchildren have received all of their vaccines. And I do not worry about the safety of them.”

    If aluminum is falsely cast as the villain and vaccine uptake falls, experts warn, the consequences will not be theoretical: more measles in schools, more meningitis in college dorms, and more young adults dying of cancers that HPV shots could have prevented.

    In their view, the real danger isn’t the trace amounts of a metal that children already encounter every day. It’s rolling back the protection aluminum-adjuvanted vaccines have provided for generations.

    That’s the trade-off Offit hopes parents will see. “A choice not to get a vaccine is not a risk-free choice,” he said. “It’s just a choice to take a different risk.”

    KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.

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  • Cheryl Hines says ‘stress’ of RFK Jr’s decision to endorse Trump led to urgent care visit

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    Cheryl Hines‘ marriage to Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has proven difficult in more ways than one. 

    During a recent interview, the “Curb Your Enthusiasm” alum, 60, opened up about how her husband’s career and political stance have impacted her physical and mental health. 

    “I went through a lot of darkness and not only because of politics,” Hines told Page Six. “I lost my nephew in the last year and it was heartbreaking. And to deal with that loss while this other chaos was going on, there were dark times.”

    CHERYL HINES ADMITS LEAVING HOLLYWOOD FOR WASHINGTON, DC WITH RFK JR. WAS ‘SCARY’

    Cheryl Hines said her husband, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s decision to endorse Trump, caused her to break out into hives.  (Getty Images)

    “But I am definitely in a new chapter that I could never have predicted I would be in.”

    After RFK Jr. — who currently serves as Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary in President Donald Trump‘s second administration — announced his intention to run for president in April 2023, Hines said safety concerns surrounding her family immediately heightened. 

    “The fact that he didn’t [initially] get Secret Service protection when he was a presidential candidate is unacceptable,” she told Page Six. “During that time, I would stay dressed with my shoes on until I was ready to go to bed, just because I didn’t know what was going to happen. And there were phone calls saying ‘Someone just showed up at his rally with loaded guns and was asking to see Bobby’ So it was a real concern.”

    Three days after Trump’s assassination attempt in July, Hines recalled a meeting with him that caused her to break out in hives and landed her in urgent care. 

    “[Trump] had the bandage on his ear that was a reminder of how close the bullet was to his temple. It really struck me that something could happen in an instant that would change everything. And I knew that Bobby was out there every day campaigning just like President Trump was doing … ” Hines said.

    COMEDIAN TIG NOTARO CLAIMS SHE ‘NEVER HEARD’ FROM CHERYL HINES AFTER RFK JR’S PRESIDENTIAL RUN

    President Donald Trump, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., and Cheryl Hines stand together in the White House

    President Donald Trump, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., and Cheryl Hines stand together in the Oval Office.  ( Jason C. Andrew/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

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    “They were talking about life and death situations, what that meant. So when we got out of that meeting, my body went into overdrive and I broke out into hives.”

    That evening, recalled Hines, she reached an unmanageable level of stress after RFK Jr. brought up the idea of dropping out and endorsing Trump.

    “They did connect on a lot of levels and had common goals that they wanted to accomplish,” she said. But “the stress of all of it was a lot. And then my lips started swelling and I was worried that my throat might start closing up and I had to go to urgent care.”

    A representative for Hines did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. 

    Kennedy has drawn criticism for his long history of controversial views on vaccines and public health policies. The former environmental lawyer’s detractors have also denounced him for breaking with the Democratic party and aligning with Trump.

    Hines has been married to Kennedy since 2014. Before they tied the knot, she was married to producer Paul Young, with whom she shares one daughter, Catherine, born in 2004.

    CHERYL HINES SLAMS HOLLYWOOD’S ‘INCLUSION’ HYPOCRISY OVER MARRIAGE TO RFK JR.

    Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and Cheryl Hines smiling

    Hines said the ‘stress’ of RFK Jr. endorsing Trump was ‘a lot.’ (Mike Coppola/WireImage)

    Hines told the outlet that she’s become used to people constantly asking her why she stays married to RFK Jr. 

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    “There’s extremes on both sides to Bobby — and being his wife — because there are a lot of people who absolutely love and support him. And then there are people who, no matter what he accomplishes, are still going to criticize him,” Hines said.

    “And I thought it was important for me to say: this is why I love him. This is who he is as a person and this is who we are to each other. If I’m just telling the truth about what I’ve been through… it makes me feel better because they’re my own words and you can’t misconstrue them.”

    But Hines is learning to embrace the positives in her life.

    “I’m learning something new every day. I didn’t know I would be learning so much about politics, but I am. And actually it makes me happy to learn new things,” she said. “I feel like I’m at a place now where I can appreciate what’s happening in my life, and I feel strong and ready, and I’m having a really good time with the people around me.”

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  • In Devastating Essay, Tatiana Schlossberg calls out RFK Jr’s Cuts to Cancer Research

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    Environmental journalist Tatiana Schlossberg, the daughter of Caroline Kennedy, announced in an essay published Saturday that she has been diagnosed with an incurable form of acute myeloid leukemia. She was diagnosed at age 34, after a routine blood draw performed following the May 2024 birth of her daughter revealed unusual results. Writing for the New Yorker, she says that in the months since, she’s undergone chemotherapy, a bone-marrow transplant, stem cell treatment, and a clinical trial for a new form of immunotherapy—many of these the result of federally supported cancer research, which her second cousin, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., slashed following his confirmation earlier this year.

    As Vanity Fair and others have reported, RFK Jr. lost the support of his family as he campaigned against vaccines and for president last year. As Joe Hagan reported for VF in 2024, his siblings were “furious” and “heartbroken” over his candidacy. Following the presidential election, his sister Caroline Kennedy, who has long shied away from public discussion of family matters, penned a damning letter to the Senate opposing his confirmation as the head of the US Department of Health and Human Services.

    According to a paper published last week in the JAMA Internal Medicine journal, RFK Jr. oversaw funding cuts to the National Institutes of Health that shut down nearly 1 out of every 30 clinical trials currently underway, many involving cancer treatments. In his role as HHS head, RFK Jr. has also expressed interest in firing the entire United States Preventive Services Task Force—a panel that advocates for cancer screenings—for being “too woke,” reports ABC News. And perhaps most significantly, the longtime vaccine critic announced in August that all mRNA vaccine development would cease, even though they are widely believed to be the next frontier in eradicating a multitude of chronic and fatal diseases, including cancer.

    In an August op-ed for the Utah News Dispatch cancer survivor and physician Brian Moench took Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to task, saying he is “slamming the door on the survival chances of millions of cancer victims.” One of those people, Natalie Phelps, tells CBS News that her participation in a clinical trial for treatment of Stage 4 metastatic colorectal cancer has been delayed due to the cuts. “I have endured so much, and now I have another hurdle just because of funding cuts?” Phelps says. “When is cancer political?”

    It’s not just cancer that’s become politicized under Kennedy. The HHS head has also opposed use of anti-depressants, falsely claiming that their use has been linked to school shootings. He fired all the members of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices in June, and last week told the New York Times that he “he personally instructed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to abandon its longstanding position that vaccines do not cause autism,” infuriating doctors including Republican Louisiana Senator Bill Cassidy, who voted to confirm RFK Jr. as HHS head only after Kennedy said he would not remove language from the CDC website debunking the disproven link between vaccinations and the disorder. Meanwhile, he’s continued to publicly misrepresent chronic disease rates in the US and oversaw mass firings at the FDA of experts tasked with the regulation of food and drug companies.

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  • CDC website is changed to include false claim about autism and vaccines

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    A page of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s website was changed to include a false claim about autism and vaccines. Multiple CDC officials familiar with the situation said the change was made by political appointees inside the Department of Health and Human Services without input from relevant agency staffers. 

    The page about vaccines and autism formerly said that “no links have been found between any vaccine ingredients and Autism spectrum disorder.” The website has now been changed to say, “‘Vaccines do not cause autism’ is not an evidence-based claim” — a statement the Autism Science Foundation calls “misinformation” that “actually contradicts the best available science.” The CDC page also falsely claims that studies supporting a link between vaccines and autism have “been ignored by health authorities.”

    Previously, changes have only occurred in consultation with subject matter experts at the agency’s National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities and its National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases. The CDC sources told CBS News political appointees at HHS devised the change and instructed an employee inside the office of acting CDC Director Jim O’Neil to make it. 

    Autism is a developmental disability caused by differences in the brain. It presents with a wide range of symptoms that can include delays in language, learning, and social or emotional skills. The National Institutes of Health has committed hundreds of millions of dollars a year to studying the condition and trying to understand how and why it develops.

    The debunked theory that the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine causes autism has its roots in a 1998 study that was found to be fraudulent and has been retracted. Since then, “independent researchers across seven countries have conducted more than 40 high-quality studies involving over 5.6 million people,” said American Academy of Pediatrics president Susan Kressly in a statement decrying the website change. 

    “We are at a very dangerous moment for the health of America’s children,” said Dr. Sean O’Leary, chair of the AAP’s Committee on Infectious Diseases, in a news briefing on Thursday.  

    Research has found no evidence of increased rates of autism among those who are vaccinated compared to those who are not. Vaccines also undergo intensive safety testing. Research shows that genetics play a role in autism diagnoses. The NIH says some possible risk factors for autism include prenatal exposure to pesticides or air pollution, extreme prematurity or low birth weight, certain maternal health conditions, or parents conceiving at an older age.  

    “There is overwhelming evidence that vaccines do not cause autism,” said Dr. Mandy Cohen, a former CDC director. “This change to CDC language undermines the agency’s scientific integrity, damaging its credibility on vaccines and other health recommendations. Most concerning, it risks endangering children by driving down vaccination rates and leaving kids vulnerable to preventable diseases like measles and whooping cough.”

    In a statement, HHS communications director Andrew Nixon said, “This is a common-sense update that brings CDC’s website in line with our commitment to transparency and gold standard science.

    “As the updated page explains, the claim that ‘vaccines do not cause autism’ is not supported by comprehensive evidence, as studies to date have not definitively ruled out potential associations. Some research suggesting possible biologic mechanisms has been ignored or dismissed by public health agencies, and HHS is committed to finding a definitive answer,” Nixon said.

    Leading autism advocacy groups dispute that. 

    The Autism Science Foundation said in a statement it was “appalled” by the change to the CDC’s website, and highlighted the decades of research into the topic. Alison Singer, the co-founder and president of the ASF, said that while researchers “can’t do a scientific study to show that something does not cause something else,” there are a “mountain of studies that we have exonerating vaccines as a cause of autism.”

    “I think the question of whether vaccines causes autism is one that science can answer, and science has answered it,” Singer said in Thursday’s news briefing.

    A subhead saying that “Vaccines do not cause autism” remains on the CDC website with an asterisk next to it. The bottom of the page explains that the header remains in place because of an agreement with Louisiana Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy, a physician who is the chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee and backed HHS Robert F. Kennedy Jr. during his confirmation hearings. Cassidy said Sunday on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” that he supported Kennedy in part because of “serious commitments” from the Trump administration, but did not specify what those were. 

    “I’m a doctor who has seen people die from vaccine-preventable diseases,” Cassidy wrote on social media on Thursday afternoon. “What parents need to hear right now is vaccines for measles, polio, hepatitis B and other childhood diseases are safe and effective and will not cause autism. Any statement to the contrary is wrong, irresponsible, and actively makes Americans sicker.” 

    Cassidy highlighted recent outbreaks of whooping cough and measles. He also called for more research into “the real causes of autism,” and criticized HHS funding cuts. 

    “Redirecting attention to factors we definitely know DO NOT cause autism denies families the answers they deserve,” Cassidy wrote.

    Other health agency pages with information about autism and vaccines had not been changed as of early Thursday afternoon.

    Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 

    CBS News


    Kennedy has previously pushed the discredited claim that routine childhood shots cause autism. President Trump has also falsely suggested vaccines could be to blame for autism rates. Both expressed concern about rising rates of autism diagnoses, which appear to be driven by a variety of factors including increased awareness and changes in how the condition is diagnosed. 

    O’Leary said he feared the website changes would “scare parents and further stigmatize” people with autism. 

    “We have been dealing with these falsehoods for many years. They are not new. We have been promoting the science, and we’re going to continue to do that, as are the other professional societies,” he said. “The problem is now it’s coming from, these falsehoods are coming for our federal government.” 

    Experts have previously raised concerns about Kennedy reviving debunked theories about the cause of autism. In April, Kennedy announced the CDC would conduct a “massive testing and research effort” to find out what causes the disorder, and hired David Geier, a man who repeatedly claimed a link between vaccines and autism, to lead the effort. Kennedy said the work would be completed by September, though other health officials later pushed the timeline

    Dr. Fiona Havers, an infectious disease physician and former CDC official, said that the website change showed scientists “who in the past carefully vetted scientific information have been pushed aside.” 

    The “CDC should be a data-driven agency based on science and not ideology, but when you take the scientists out of the process you get rhetoric that can harm families,” said former CDC chief science and medical officer Dr. Debra Houry, who lresigned from the agency earlier this year.

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  • CDC website changed to include false claims that link autism and vaccines

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    (CNN) — Scientific information on the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s website was replaced Wednesday with anti-vaccine talking points that don’t rule out a link between vaccines and autism, despite an abundance of evidence that there’s no connection.

    Bullet points on the top of the page now state that “vaccines do not cause autism is not an evidence-based claim” because studies have not ruled out the possibility that infant vaccines cause autism.

    The language is a common tactic used to cast doubt on the safety of vaccines, said Alison Singer, president and co-founder of the Autism Science Foundation.

    “You can’t do a scientific study to show that something does not cause something else,” she said Thursday.

    “All we can do in the scientific community is point to the preponderance of the evidence, the number of studies, the fact that the studies are so conclusive,” Singer said. “These studies all agree. They’re very clear, and it’s time to move on.”

    The preponderance of scientific evidence shows that vaccines do not cause autism, Singer said.

    No environmental factor has been better studied as a potential cause of autism than vaccines. This includes vaccine ingredients as well as the body’s response to vaccines,” the Autism Science Foundation said in a statement Thursday.

    Dr. Paul Offit agrees. In a post on Substack on Thursday, Offit, a pediatrician and director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, said scientific studies can “never prove never.”

    “If RFK Jr. wanted to be honest with the American public, he would make it clear on the CDC’s website that chicken nuggets also might cause autism, which has never been and will never be disproven,” Offit wrote.

    HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon said Thursday, “We are updating the CDC’s website to reflect gold standard, evidence-based science.”

    However, Dr. Marty Makary, commissioner of the US Food and Drug Administration, recently told CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta on an episode of his “Chasing Life” podcast that he doesn’t think vaccines cause autism.

    “I think there’s no medicine that’s 1,000% safe,” Makary said. “And I think we have to remember that with everything. I think the absolutism around some of this stuff creates mistrust. And when we say they’re 1,000% safe and it’s impossible for there to be a single complication of a vaccine, that’s the kind of rhetoric, I think, that doesn’t resonate well. So I think we have be humble and take a very honest approach.”

    Studies find no relationship

    Other bullets on the updated CDC page say studies supporting a link between vaccines and autism have been ignored by health authorities. This too is not true: Studies showing a connection between vaccines and autism have proved to be poorly done or were fraudulent. There are, however, many well-done, credible studies that find no such relationship.

    One of the largest studies looking at this question was published in 2019. Researchers in Denmark enrolled more than 650,000 children born between 1999 and 2011 and followed them from the time they were 1 year of age until the end of August 2013. Roughly 6,500 children were diagnosed with autism during the study period.

    When the researchers compared those who received the MMR vaccine with those who did not, they found no significant difference in the risk of developing autism. That held true whether the kids got other vaccines, such as the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine; whether they had siblings with autism; or a host of other factors, such as whether certain kids might be prone to developing a form of regressive autism after getting their shots.

    “This study strongly supports that MMR vaccine does not increase the risk for autism,” the authors wrote in the conclusion.

    This study is not cited on the CDC’s updated “state of the evidence” on MMR vaccines, however. Instead, it mentions older evidence reviews and raises questions about aluminum, an ingredient added to some vaccines to boost their protection.

    The new CDC updates do mention another recent Danish study, published in 2025, which found no link between aluminum in childhood vaccines and any of 50 disorders, including neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism. But instead of accepting the overall conclusion of the study, the new CDC page tries to cast doubt on it by homing in on details of data in a supplementary table, saying the findings and other “warrant further investigation” into aluminum exposure and chronic diseases.

    The CDC page also says the US Department of Health and Human Services has launched a comprehensive assessment of the causes of autism, including investigations on plausible biologic mechanisms and potential causal links.

    Singer said this is a waste of valuable research money and a distraction from strong science showing that most cases of autism can be traced to genes that affect a baby’s brain development.

    The main heading on the page states that “Vaccines do not cause Autism,” but it has an asterisk that directs readers to a footnote: “The header ‘Vaccines do not cause autism’ has not been removed due to an agreement with the chair of the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee that it would remain on the CDC website.”

    The footnote seems to refer to a commitment by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to Sen. Bill Cassidy, a physician and Republican from Louisiana, during his confirmation process that language on the CDC website “pointing out that vaccines do not cause autism” would not be removed. Cassidy described the promise in a speech in which he explained his support for Kennedy, a longtime anti-vaccine activist.

    Cassidy told CNN on Thursday that he had spoken with Kennedy.

    In a statement posted on X on Thursday, Cassidy said, “I’m a doctor who has seen people die from vaccine-preventable diseases. What parents need to hear right now is vaccines for measles, polio, hepatitis B and other childhood diseases are safe and effective and will not cause autism. Any statement to the contrary is wrong, irresponsible, and actively makes Americans sicker.”

    ‘Dangerous health disinformation’

    Dr. Peter Hotez, who is director of the Center for Vaccine Development at Texas Children’s Hospital and wrote a book called “Vaccines Did Not Cause Rachel’s Autism” about his daughter’s diagnosis, said the updated information on the CDC’s page follows a well-worn playbook.

    “They’ve decided they want to prove vaccines cause autism. So they keep making a series of assertions,” Hotez said, going back to debunked research that claimed the MMR vaccines caused autism and a retracted 2005 Rolling Stone article by Kennedy that asserted the preservative thimerosal caused autism.

    There have also been claims that aluminum in vaccines was a cause of autism, and those have been disproved, Hotez said.

    Hotez says the updates to the CDC’s page are “pure garbage.”

    “I consider it a piece of dangerous health disinformation, and it needs to be removed right away,” he said.

    Dr. Demetre Daskalakis, who recently resigned as director of the CDC’s National Center on Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said on social media late Wednesday that the changes are “a national embarrassment.”

    “The weaponization of the voice of CDC is getting worse. This is a public health emergency,” he wrote.

    Daskalakis said the agency’s scientists were completely blindsided by the page update.

    “This distortion of science under the CDC moniker is the reason I resigned with my colleagues,” he told CNN.

    Rather than restoring trust in America’s health agencies, moves like this have undermined it, said Dr. Sean O’ Leary, a pediatrician who chairs the Committee on Infectious Diseases for the American Academy of Pediatrics.

    “I fear that it’s going to lead to fewer children being vaccinated, children suffering from diseases they didn’t need to suffer from,” O’Leary said.

    This is the latest move by the Trump administration to alter longstanding US vaccine policy and practice and cast doubt on vaccinations.

    Kennedy has hired longtime anti-vax allies – including David Geier, a discredited researcher who was once disciplined by the Maryland State Board of Physicians for practicing medicine without a license, and Lyn Redwood, a nurse who was president of the World Mercury Project, which later became Children’s Health Defense, an anti-vaccine group Kennedy ran before campaigning for office – to undertake new evaluations of government data in an effort to prove conspiracy theories that hazards of vaccines have long been hidden from the public.

    The rate of routine childhood vaccinations has dropped in the United States, allowing preventable diseases including measles and whooping cough to surge. In a call with state health officials Monday, the CDC disease detectives leading the measles response suggested that the US status as a country that has eliminated continuous measles spread was in jeopardy.

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  • Cheryl Hines slams Hollywood’s ‘inclusion’ hypocrisy over marriage to RFK Jr.

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    “Curb Your Enthusiasm” star Cheryl Hines is calling out what she sees as hypocrisy in Hollywood. 

    The 60-year-old actress says she’s faced backlash from her entertainment industry colleagues over her marriage to Robert F. Kennedy Jr, who is serving as Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary in President Donald Trump’s second administration. 

    During a recent interview with the Times of London, Hines candidly shared her thoughts on what she sees as Hollywood’s double standards. 

    “I have compassion for those actors and entertainers who really want people to know where they stand morally, I suppose,” Hines said. “[But] I’ve never been one of them. I’ve been a person who has not been politically inclined. But it is eye-opening to see people really wanting to tell you how much their morals do not line up with, say, the present administration, because they don’t like hate or judgment.”

    CHERYL HINES REFUSED RFK JR.’S OFFER TO FAKE SEPARATION DURING HEATED PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN

    Cheryl Hines is calling out Hollywood hypocrisy.  (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

    She continued, “But then that’s exactly what they inflict on other people: ‘We’re inclusive. We like everybody regardless. Except her. She’s married to this guy and I don’t like that guy.’”

    Kennedy has drawn criticism for his long history of controversial views on vaccines and public health policies. The former environmental lawyer’s detractors have also denounced him for breaking with the Democratic party and aligning with Trump. 

    Hines has been married to Kennedy since 2014. Before they tied the knot, she was married to producer Paul Young, with whom she shares one daughter, Catherine, born in 2004.

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    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. stands beside his wife, actress Cheryl Hines, during a ceremony in the Oval Office.

    Hines has said she has been excluded over her marriage to Robert F. Kennedy Jr.  (Jason C. Andrew/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    The Emmy nominee has previously said that some of her friends in Hollywood no longer speak to her, including her “Curb Your Enthusiasm” co-star Larry David, who introduced her to Kennedy. 

    CHERYL HINES ADMITS LEAVING HOLLYWOOD FOR WASHINGTON, DC WITH RFK JR. WAS ‘SCARY’

    When asked if David or any of her other estranged friends reached out to her during her recent tour for her new memoir, “Unscripted,” Hines told the Times, “No, but in all fairness, I haven’t reached out to them.” 

    “On one hand it sounds like a big deal to people, and on another, it’s not,” she continued. “It’s a moment in time. If I saw Larry I would be happy to see him. I don’t know what the conversation would be like, but I think it would be perfectly fine.”

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Cheryl Hines, and Larry David pose together and smile at RFK Jr.'s and Cheryl Hines' wedding.

    Hines previously said that Larry David, who introduced her to Kennedy, no longer speaks to her.  (Cheryl Hines)

    Hines also expressed her support for Sydney Sweeney’s choice not to comment on the controversy around her American Eagle “Great Jeans” ad campaign.

    “She hasn’t felt the need to come out and say, ‘You’ve got it wrong. I believe this. I vote this way.’ It’s nobody’s business. She’s there to entertain people,” Hines said.

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    cheryl hines and robert f. kennedy jr smiling

    Hines and Kennedy married in 2014.  (Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images)

    During an appearance last month on the “The Katie Miller Podcast,” Hines reflected on losing friends over her marriage.

    “I have had some friends who are so emotional about politics that even me being married to Bobby is too much for them,” she said. “It’s too much emotionally to even have a friendship with me. They can’t be relaxed around me.”

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    After she was asked whether her husband’s politics had led to her losing roles, Hines responded, “Probably,” but added that some people in Hollywood have continued to support her.

    “There are people that feel like they can’t separate the fact that I’m married to Bobby,” Hines said. “And there are also people in the entertainment industry coming up to me saying, ‘I really want to work with you.’ It’s a double-edged sword.”

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  • Trump unveils deal to expand coverage and lower costs on obesity drugs

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    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump unveiled a deal Thursday with drugmakers Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk to expand coverage and reduce prices for the popular obesity treatments Zepbound and Wegovy.

    Known as GLP-1 receptor agonists, the drugs have soared in popularity in recent years, but patient access has been a consistent problem because of their cost — around $500 a month for higher doses — and insurance coverage has been spotty. More than 100 million American adults are obese, according to federal estimates.

    Coverage of the drugs for obesity will expand to Medicare patients starting next year, according to the administration, which said some lower prices also will be phased in for patients without coverage. Starting doses of new, pill versions of the treatments also will cost $149 a month if they are approved.

    “(It) will save lives, improve the health of millions and millions of Americans,” said Trump, in an Oval Office announcement in which he referred to GLP-1s as a “fat drug.”

    Thursday’s announcement is the latest attempt by the Trump administration to rein in soaring drug prices in its efforts to address cost-of-living concerns among voters. Pfizer and AstraZeneca recently agreed to lower the cost of prescription drugs for Medicaid after an executive order in May set a deadline for drugmakers to electively lower prices or face new limits on what the government will pay.

    As with the other deals, it’s not clear how much the price drop will be felt by consumers. Drug prices can vary based on the competition for treatments and insurance coverage.

    Obesity drugs are popular, but costly

    The obesity drugs work by targeting hormones in the gut and brain that affect appetite and feelings of fullness. In clinical trials, they helped people shed 15% to 22% of their body weight — up to 50 pounds or more in many cases.

    Patients usually start on smaller doses and then work up to larger amounts, depending on their needs. They need to stay on the the treatments indefinitely or risk regaining weight, experts say.

    The medications have proven especially lucrative for Lilly and Novo. Lilly said recently that sales of Zepbound have tripled so far this year to more than $9 billion.

    But for many Americans, their cost has made them out of reach.

    Medicare, the federally funded coverage program mainly for people ages 65 and over, now covers the cost of the drugs for conditions such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, but not for weight loss alone. Trump’s predecessor, Joe Biden, proposed a rule last November that would have changed that, but the Trump administration nixed it.

    Few state and federally funded Medicaid programs, for people with low incomes, offer coverage. And employers and insurers that provide commercial coverage are wary of paying for these drugs in part because so many people might use them.

    The $500 monthly price for higher doses of the treatments also makes them unaffordable for those without insurance, doctors say.

    Trump tries to show he is in touch with cost-of-living concerns

    Thursday’s announcement comes as the White House is looking to demonstrate that Trump is in touch with Americans’ frustrations with rising costs for food, housing, health care and other necessities.

    “Trump is the friend of the forgotten American,” said Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. at Thursday’s announcement. “Obesity is a disease of poverty. And overwhelmingly, these drugs have only been available for people who have wealth.”

    (Obesity rates actually are slightly higher for middle-income Americans than they are for those with the lowest and highest incomes, according to 2017-2020 data collected by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.)

    Kennedy had previously expressed skepticism about GLP-1s, but he was full of praise for Trump for pushing to help a broader segment of Americans have access to the drug.

    Trump, who has a history of commenting on people’s appearance, asked the officials who joined him in the Oval Office whether they had used the weight-loss medications.

    “Do you take any of this stuff, Howard?” Trump asked Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick. “Not yet,” Lutnick replied. “He’s taking it,” the president said of Steven Cheung, who is the White House director of communications.

    The drug-pricing announcement came days after Democrats swept elections in races across the country. Economic worries were the dominant concern for those casting their ballots, according to findings from the AP voter poll.

    Plan calls for phased-in price reductions

    The White House sought to diminish price-reduction efforts by the previous Democratic administration as a gift to the pharmaceutical industry.

    Trump, instead, consummated a deal that ensures Americans aren’t unfairly financing the pharmaceutical industry’s innovation, claimed a senior administration official, who briefed reporters ahead of Thursday’s Oval Office announcement.

    Another senior administration official said coverage of the drugs will expand to Medicare patients starting next year. The program will start covering the treatments for people who have severe obesity and others who are overweight or obese and have serious health problems, the official said. Those who qualify will pay $50 copays for the medicine.

    Lower prices also will be phased in for people without coverage through the administration’s TrumpRx program, which will allow people to buy drugs directly from manufacturers, starting in January.

    Administration officials said the average price of the drugs sold on TrumpRx will start at around $350 and then drop to $245 over the next two years.

    A Novo Nordisk spokesperson declined to provide details on their pricing changes.

    Lilly said it will sell a starter dose of Zepbound for $299 a month and additional doses at up to $449. Both represent $50 reductions from current prices for doses it sells directly to patients.

    Administration officials said lower prices also will be provided for state and federally funded Medicaid programs. And starting doses of new, pill versions of the obesity treatments will cost $149 a month if they are approved.

    U.S. health regulators on Thursday separately agreed to dramatically expedite review of Lilly’s obesity pill, orforglipron. An FDA decision on Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy pill is expected later this year.

    Doctors who treat patients for obesity say help is needed to improve access. Dr. Leslie Golden says she has roughly 600 patients taking one of these treatments, and at least 75% struggle to afford them. Even with coverage, some face $150 copayments for refills.

    “Every visit it’s, ‘How long can we continue to do this? What’s the plan if I can’t continue?’” said Golden, an obesity medicine specialist in Watertown, Wisconsin. “Some of them are working additional jobs or delaying retirement so they can continue to pay for it.”

    ___

    AP Health Writer Matthew Perrone contributed to this report.

    ___

    The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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  • Canadian ostrich farm loses long legal battle to avoid cull of its birds, despite plea from RFK Jr.

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    The Supreme Court of Canada on Thursday unanimously dismissed a last-ditch appeal by an ostrich farm in British Columbia to save its flock of hundreds of birds. The government issued a cull order for the farm’s stock last year, and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency said it would proceed with killing the ostriches to prevent an avian flu outbreak.

    “The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) will be moving forward to complete depopulation and disposal measures as authorized by the Health of Animals Act and guided by the stamping out policy for highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI),” the CFIA said in a statement following the court’s decision.

    The CFIA did not say how the ostriches would be killed, but multiple gunshots were heard at the Universal Ostrich Farm on Thursday night, according to Canadian media. The gunfire could be heard on a live video stream on farm spokesperson Katie Pasitney’s Facebook page.

    Police tape is seen around an ostrich pen at Universal Ostrich Farms in Edgewood, British Columbia, Canada, in a photo posted on social media by farm spokeswoman Katie Pasitney on Oct. 18, 2025.

    Katie Pasitney/Universal Ostrich Farms/Facebook


    Pasitney made an emotional plea to the Supreme Court to rule against the cull just before Thursday’s court meeting, saying the birds were healthy and posed no threat.

    “Supreme Court of Canada, they are healthy. They are everything that we have and everything that we loved for 35 years, please stop,” she said in a video posted on social media. 

    It has been nearly a year since over 300 ostriches on the farm became embroiled in a legal battle between the CFIA and their owners in Edgewood, British Columbia.

    In early December 2024, an outbreak of the highly pathogenic avian influenza virus hit the farm, resulting in the deaths of nearly 70 birds within a few weeks. The CFIA described the outbreak as “unprecedented” and warned that it could have a significant impact on Canada’s poultry industry, ordering a cull of the affected birds. 

    “You want to know what pain looks like?” Pasitney asked in an emotional video posted online right after the court’s decision on Thursday, showing her mother, the farm’s owner, crying. “She is going to lose everything she has ever loved for 35 years … that’s what pain looks like when the government fails you.”

    Canada Bird Flu Ostriches

    Dave Bilinski, the co-owner of Universal Ostrich Farms, participates in a group prayer in Edgewood, British Columbia, Canada, following the announcement that the Supreme Court of Canada dismissed the farm’s appeal to stay an order to cull more than 300 of its ostriches, Nov. 6, 2025.

    Aaron Hemens/The Canadian Press via AP


    The CFIA said it takes its responsibility to protect the health of both animals and Canadians extremely seriously, and that it takes all disease control measures deemed necessary to protect health and trade.

    “Given that the flock has had multiple laboratory-confirmed cases of H5N1 and the ongoing serious risks for animal and human health and trade, the CFIA continues planning for humane depopulation with veterinary oversight at the infected premises,” the agency said.

    The case drew attention from the U.S. government, with Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., along with the director of the National Institutes of Health and the commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, sending a letter to the head of the CFIA in May asking him to reconsider the cull, arguing that the ostriches could be valuable to study.

    “We are respectfully requesting CFIA to consider not culling the entire flock of ostriches at Universal Ostrich Farm,” Kennedy’s letter said, “given that a proportion of these ostriches were infected with avian influenza (H5N1) last year, we believe there is significant value in studying this population, for several reasons.”

    In a follow-up letter in July, Kenndey urged the CFIA to delay the cull and proposed immediate collaboration between the CFIA, Canadian researchers and the U.S. National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

    Dr. Mehmet Oz, administrator for the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, offered the farm’s owners the option of relocating the birds to his ranch in Florida, but the offer was turned down, according to Canada’s national public broadcaster CBC. 

    The CFIA said it would compensate the farm owners for the value of the animals, paying up to $2,200 per bird once supporting documentation was completed.

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  • Tylenol, Kleenex, Band-Aid and more put under one roof in $48.7 billion consumer brands deal

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    Kimberly-Clark is buying Tylenol maker Kenvue in a cash and stock deal worth about $48.7 billion, creating a massive consumer health goods company.

    Shareholders of Kimberly-Clark will own about 54% of the combined company. Kenvue shareholders will own about 46% in what is one of the largest corporate takeovers this year. The deal must still be approved by the shareholders of both companies.

    The combined company will have a huge stable of household brands under one roof, putting Kenvue’s Listerine mouthwash and Band-Aid side-by-side with Kimberly-Clark’s Cottonelle toilet paper, Huggies and Kleenex tissues. It will also generate about $32 billion in annual revenue.

    Kenvue has spent a relatively brief period as an independent company, having been spun off by Johnson & Johnson two years ago. J&J first announced in late 2021 that it was splitting its slow-growth consumer health division from the pharmaceutical and medical device divisions.

    Kenvue has since been targeted by activist investors unhappy about the trajectory of the company and Wall Street appeared to anticipate some heavy lifting ahead for Kimberly-Clark.

    Kenvue’s stock jumped 12% Monday afternoon, while shares of Kimberly-Clark, based outside of Dallas, slumped by nearly 15%.

    Kenvue shares have shed nearly 50% of their value since approaching $28 in the spring of 2023. Morningstar analyst Keonhee Kim said Kenvue’s volatile journey as a public company may have been driven in part by poor execution and a lack of experience operating as a stand-alone business.

    He said the leadership of a more-established consumer products company like Kimberly-Clark could help unlock some of Kenvue’s value.

    He also noted that Kenvue brands include Neutrogena, Benadryl and other names that have been in store consumer health aisles for decades. Kim said he thinks Kimberly-Clark may have seen upside in adding those products.

    “I think that may have made the deal a lot more attractive … especially after the past couple of months of Kenvue’s stock price decline,” he said.

    Kenvue and Tylenol have been thrust into the national spotlight this year as President Donald Trump and Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. promoted unproven and in some cases discredited ties between Tylenol, vaccines and the complex brain disorder autism.

    Trump then urged pregnant women against using the medicine. That went beyond Food and Drug Administration advice that doctors “should consider minimizing” the painkiller acetaminophen’s use in pregnancy — amid inconclusive evidence about whether too much could be linked to autism.

    Kennedy reiterated the FDA guidance during a press conference last week. He said that there isn’t sufficient evidence to link the drug to autism.

    “We have asked physicians to minimize the use to when it’s absolutely necessary,” he said.

    Kenvue has continued to push back on the Trump administration’s public statements about Tylenol and acetaminophen, the active ingredient it contains.

    “We strongly disagree with allegations that it does and are deeply concerned about the health risks and confusion this poses for expecting mothers and parents,” Kenvue said in a statement on its website.

    The merger could face other hurdles. Citi Investment Research analyst Filippo Falorni said he is concerned about the deal’s size given the recent history in the sector, particularly given the challenges faced by Kenvue.

    In July, Kenvue announced that CEO Thibaut Mongon was leaving in the midst of a strategic review, with the company under mounting pressure from activist investors unhappy about growth. Critics say Kenvue has relied too much on its legacy brands and failed to innovate.

    Industry analysts also point out the poor track record for mergers involving consumer packaged goods companies. In September, Kraft Heinz said it would break up its decade-old merger. Its net revenue has fallen every year since 2020.

    Kimberly-Clark and Kenvue, like Kraft Heinz, are facing increasing competition from cheaper store brands. In 2024, 51% of toilet paper and other household paper products sold in the U.S were store brands, according to Circana, a market research company, while store brands held a 24% share of sales of health products, including medications and vitamins.

    On Monday, a bottle of 100 extra-strength Tylenol caplets cost $10.97 on Walmart’s website. A bottle of 100 extra-strength acetaminophen caplets from Walmart’s Equate brand cost $1.98.

    Inflation drove some of that buyer behavior, Circana said. Shoppers are also shifting their purchases to stores with more private-label brands, like Aldi and Costco. And stores are improving their offerings and adding more of them; last year, Walmart and Target both launched new store brands to complement their existing ones.

    Still, both Kimberly-Clark and Kenvue make name-brand products in segments where consumers are less likely to shift to store brands, including hair care, skin care, feminine products and mouth care, according to Circana. Kenvue owns brands like Aveeno and Neutrogena, for example, while Kimberly-Clark makes Kotex and Depend.

    Kimberly-Clark Chairman and CEO Mike Hsu will be chairman and CEO of the combined company. Three members of the Kenvue’s board will join Kimberly-Clark’s board at closing. The combined company will keep Kimberly-Clark’s headquarters in Irving, Texas, but there will be significant operations around Kenvue facilities and locations as well.

    The deal is expected to close in the second half of next year. It still needs approval from shareholders of both both companies.

    Kenvue shareholders will receive $3.50 per share in cash and 0.14625 Kimberly-Clark shares for each Kenvue share held at closing. That amounts to $21.01 per share, based on the closing price of Kimberly-Clark shares on Friday.

    Kimberly-Clark and Kenvue said that they identified about $1.9 billion in cost savings that are expected in the first three years after the transaction’s closing.

    ___

    AP Health Writer Tom Murphy contributed to this report.

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  • FDA’s top drug regulator resigns after federal officials probe ‘serious concerns’

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    The head of the Food and Drug Administration’s drug center abruptly resigned Sunday after federal officials began reviewing “serious concerns about his personal conduct,” according to a government spokesperson.Dr. George Tidmarsh, who was named to the FDA post in July, was placed on leave Friday after officials in the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of General Counsel were notified of the issues, HHS press secretary Emily Hilliard said in an email. Tidmarsh then resigned Sunday morning.“Secretary Kennedy expects the highest ethical standards from all individuals serving under his leadership and remains committed to full transparency,” Hilliard said.The departure came the same day that a drugmaker connected to one of Tidmarsh’s former business associates filed a lawsuit alleging that he made “false and defamatory statements,” during his time at the FDA.The lawsuit, brought by Aurinia Pharmaceuticals, alleges that Tidmarsh used his FDA position to pursue a “longstanding personal vendetta” against the chair of the company’s board of directors, Kevin Tang.Tang previously served as a board member of several drugmakers where Tidmarsh was an executive, including La Jolla Pharmaceutical, and was involved in his ouster from those leadership positions, according to the lawsuit.Messages placed to Tidmarsh and his lawyer were not immediately returned late Sunday.Tidmarsh founded and led a series of pharmaceutical companies over several decades working in California’s pharmaceutical and biotech industries. Before joining the FDA, he also served as an adjunct professor at Stanford University. He was recruited to join the agency over the summer after meeting with FDA Commissioner Marty Makary.Tidmarsh’s ouster is the latest in a string of haphazard leadership changes at the agency, which has been rocked for months by firings, departures and controversial decisions on vaccines, fluoride and other products.Dr. Vinay Prasad, who oversees FDA’s vaccine and biologics center, resigned in July after coming under fire from conservative activists close to President Donald Trump, only to rejoin the agency two weeks later at the behest of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.The FDA’s drug center, which Tidmarsh oversaw, has lost more than 1,000 staffers over the past year to layoffs or resignations, according to agency figures. The center is the largest division of the FDA and is responsible for the review, safety and quality control of prescription and over-the-counter medicines.In September, Tidmarsh drew public attention for a highly unusual post on LinkedIn stating that one of Aurinia Pharmaceutical’s products, a kidney drug, had “not been shown to provide a direct clinical benefit for patients.” It’s very unusual for an FDA regulator to single out individual companies and products in public comments online.According to the company’s lawsuit, Aurinia’s stock dropped 20% shortly after the post, wiping out more than $350 million in shareholder value.Tidmarsh later deleted the LinkedIn post and said he had posted it in his personal capacity, not as an FDA official.Aurinia’s lawsuit also alleges, among other things, that Tidmarsh used his post at FDA to target a type of thyroid drug made by another company, American Laboratories, where Tang also serves as board chair.The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court of Maryland, seeks compensatory and punitive damages and “to set the record straight,” according to the company.

    The head of the Food and Drug Administration’s drug center abruptly resigned Sunday after federal officials began reviewing “serious concerns about his personal conduct,” according to a government spokesperson.

    Dr. George Tidmarsh, who was named to the FDA post in July, was placed on leave Friday after officials in the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of General Counsel were notified of the issues, HHS press secretary Emily Hilliard said in an email. Tidmarsh then resigned Sunday morning.

    “Secretary Kennedy expects the highest ethical standards from all individuals serving under his leadership and remains committed to full transparency,” Hilliard said.

    The departure came the same day that a drugmaker connected to one of Tidmarsh’s former business associates filed a lawsuit alleging that he made “false and defamatory statements,” during his time at the FDA.

    The lawsuit, brought by Aurinia Pharmaceuticals, alleges that Tidmarsh used his FDA position to pursue a “longstanding personal vendetta” against the chair of the company’s board of directors, Kevin Tang.

    Tang previously served as a board member of several drugmakers where Tidmarsh was an executive, including La Jolla Pharmaceutical, and was involved in his ouster from those leadership positions, according to the lawsuit.

    Messages placed to Tidmarsh and his lawyer were not immediately returned late Sunday.

    Tidmarsh founded and led a series of pharmaceutical companies over several decades working in California’s pharmaceutical and biotech industries. Before joining the FDA, he also served as an adjunct professor at Stanford University. He was recruited to join the agency over the summer after meeting with FDA Commissioner Marty Makary.

    Tidmarsh’s ouster is the latest in a string of haphazard leadership changes at the agency, which has been rocked for months by firings, departures and controversial decisions on vaccines, fluoride and other products.

    Dr. Vinay Prasad, who oversees FDA’s vaccine and biologics center, resigned in July after coming under fire from conservative activists close to President Donald Trump, only to rejoin the agency two weeks later at the behest of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

    The FDA’s drug center, which Tidmarsh oversaw, has lost more than 1,000 staffers over the past year to layoffs or resignations, according to agency figures. The center is the largest division of the FDA and is responsible for the review, safety and quality control of prescription and over-the-counter medicines.

    In September, Tidmarsh drew public attention for a highly unusual post on LinkedIn stating that one of Aurinia Pharmaceutical’s products, a kidney drug, had “not been shown to provide a direct clinical benefit for patients.” It’s very unusual for an FDA regulator to single out individual companies and products in public comments online.

    According to the company’s lawsuit, Aurinia’s stock dropped 20% shortly after the post, wiping out more than $350 million in shareholder value.

    Tidmarsh later deleted the LinkedIn post and said he had posted it in his personal capacity, not as an FDA official.

    Aurinia’s lawsuit also alleges, among other things, that Tidmarsh used his post at FDA to target a type of thyroid drug made by another company, American Laboratories, where Tang also serves as board chair.

    The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court of Maryland, seeks compensatory and punitive damages and “to set the record straight,” according to the company.

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  • When Food Aid Gets Cut, America Pays the Price

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    A government stalemate over SNAP threatens to unravel not only food access but also the nation’s public health and workforce stability. Unsplash+

    The federal government shutdown has upended the lives of millions of Americans who rely on essential benefits disbursed by federal agencies. Principally among them is the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), which assists one in eight Americans who otherwise wouldn’t be able to put food on the table for themselves or their dependents. Now, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has confirmed that due to the shutdown, the well has “run dry,” and no benefits will be issued starting Nov. 1. As a result of Washington’s failure to reach an agreement on fiscal priorities, millions of SNAP recipients who typically receive food dollars on the first of the month at the reset of EBT payments will be left without assistance. And even more Americans will pay the price.

    The lowest 20 percent of earners will feel the blow most acutely, as the loss of benefits devastates their ability to access nutritionally sound and affordable food options. When food access disappears, so does nutritional stability, triggering ripple effects across health, education and local communities. As families’ resources for healthy meals diminish, and as some go without food entirely, these changes have the potential to exacerbate food insecurity and deteriorate overall public health outcomes. Without swift intervention, the disruption could spiral into a national health crisis. 

    Few Americans grasp the magnitude of SNAP’s reach or the economic engine it fuels. Over 40 million people, who are integral to our national and local economies, workforces, and communities, rely on SNAP. Every dollar spent in SNAP generates roughly twice that amount in local economic activity. When those dollars vanish, corner stores, grocers, farmers’ markets and food distributors all feel the squeeze. Those losses flow upstream into job cuts, supply chain disruptions and reduced consumer spending, an economic domino that affects Americans across income brackets. 

    The health consequences are just as serious. When households can’t access food, preventable illnesses and chronic conditions often worsen. The result is a surge in emergency room visits, mental health crises and avoidable hospitalizations. Many Americans living below the poverty line already struggle to stay engaged with their physician, pharmacy and other healthcare providers, and without food, will have even less of a reason to prioritize things like medication adherence, chronic condition management or other self-care behaviors. This will not only lead to worsened health outcomes, but could also threaten to overrun hospitals and force ER staff to turn down patients in need. That strain will reverberate through an already overburdened healthcare system, exacerbating workforce shortages and driving up costs for everyone. 

    Public health experts estimate that inequities tied to food insecurity already contribute billions in avoidable medical spending and productivity losses each year. If the shutdown persists, those numbers will balloon. In a volatile economy where every sector is struggling to preserve stability, the loss of a cornerstone program like SNAP threatens to erode both pubic health and national productivity. 

    These Inequities also contribute to a broader economic drag: poor health outcomes significantly contribute to healthcare spending and lost Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which accounts for approximately 20 percent of the total cost of healthcare. Not only will this cost our healthcare system billions of dollars, but the crisis carries a human toll, costing individuals their dignity and many communities’ financial stability, as local grocers, farmers and other small businesses face collateral damage. 

    Carts full of groceries wait to be given to people in need at Curley's House Food Bank in Florida on October 30, 2025, days before SNAP benefits may expire due to the federal government shutdown Carts full of groceries wait to be given to people in need at Curley's House Food Bank in Florida on October 30, 2025, days before SNAP benefits may expire due to the federal government shutdown
    Groceries await pickup at a Miami food bank days before potential SNAP benefit cuts, an image of the broader economic strain that follows when food aid falters. Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    Whether you claim SNAP benefits or not, you will be impacted

    The pressure on low-income Americans is compounded by additional changes to SNAP and Medicaid set in motion by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), passed in July, well before the government shutdown even began. The legislation stipulates that able-bodied, childless adults between 18 and 64 must work, attend school or perform at least 80 hours of community service per month to receive Medicaid and SNAP benefits. Although many people meet these requirements through their equivalent activity, the new processes that are both lengthy and tedious will disqualify millions from receiving benefits, as they lack the resources to understand, navigate and ensure compliance. While intended to encourage workforce participation, the policy’s complexity and documentation requirements are creating new administrative barriers that disproportionately affect those without stable access to transportation, childcare or digital tools. 

    When the shutdown finally comes to an end, the OBBBA will keep millions in bureaucratic limbo, perpetuating problems for those seeking not only food-related benefits but healthcare more broadly, again impacting the most vulnerable Americans. This type of legislation, which threatens to strip impoverished groups of their access to food resources, stands in direct opposition to the stated goals of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement, which calls for policies that make nutritious, unprocessed foods more accessible.

    With the shutdown and the onset of OBBBA, SNAP will be in flux for many, forcing those with limited resources to stretch their dollars on cheaper, more processed and less nutritious foods, exactly the opposite of what MAHA aims to achieve. This disconnect, along with the administration’s failure to address the root causes, further underscores its inability to recognize the broader impact that neglecting this population has on all its constituents.

    When the government shuts down, we must show up

    Ultimately, it’s up to healthcare professionals, business leaders and the private sector to mobilize and step in where the public sector is falling short. Partnerships between food producers, health systems and nonprofits can sustain emergency distribution programs, while employers and insurers can invest in nutrition-support initiatives that reduce downstream costs. Millions of people are being left behind by SNAP cuts, and their well-being depends on our collective response. Communities that have long relied on federal support are now at a breaking point. If we allow communities to fall through the cracks, the damage won’t be confined to any one ZIP code. It will manifest in slower growth, sicker populations and a weakened economy. To preserve the health, dignity, and stability of our society, we need bold, sustainable and financially viable solutions that close these gaps once and for all.

    When Food Aid Gets Cut, America Pays the Price

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  • Cheryl Hines’s MAGA Makeover Has Her Hollywood Colleagues Scratching Their Heads: “I Don’t Know You Anymore!”

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    What a long, stranger-than-fiction trip it’s been for Cheryl Hines. Over the last year and a half, her transition from Hollywood liberal to MAGA wife has stunned Curb Your Enthusiasm fans, not to mention some of her friends and entertainment industry colleagues.

    “There’s just mutual headshaking,” says one former colleague sadly. Whenever the subject of Hines comes up within their social circles, “It’s like you lock eyes and you shake heads and you move on.” Another industry insider who has worked with her says, “It’s a sense of betrayal, like, who are you? Were you always like this? I don’t know you anymore!”

    Now that she’s on the press trail hawking Unscripted, her forthcoming memoir about her life and marriage to Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Hines is suddenly ubiquitous—and her media bombardment is triggering a new wave of sadness and disgust from some in Hollywood who once admired her. “I think people gave her the benefit of the doubt,” says the former colleague.

    “Unfortunately, we’re now sitting here and it has been 10 months of a war on science, a war on vaccines, and a war on general intelligence. And to have to listen to this craziness about Tylenol and circumcision and whatnot,” this person continued. “It’s true insanity.”

    In the wake of measles outbreaks, the normalization of junk science, and the whole Tylenol thing, the question of whether Hines’s career can survive this moment might seem frivolous. But at least one Hollywood heavyweight who knows Hines has their mind made up: “Whatever her reasons for staying with that weird, imbecilic husband and whether or not she subscribes to his inane positions is of no real consequence,” this person says disdainfully. “It isn’t as though we’re talking about Zendaya, whom one would desperately want to get into their movie.” Hines’s most recent project is a short film called Prowl that she starred in with her daughter, Catherine Rose Young.

    No one interviewed for this piece wanted their name attached to their criticisms of Hines, out of residual respect for her or fear of Trump reprisal, or both. And none of Hines’s Curb costars have publicly aired their feelings about her transformation either; Those whom I contacted declined to comment. Even Larry David—who’s never been quiet about his liberal leanings, and who Hines credits for introducing her to RFK Jr. at an environmental fundraiser many years ago—has kept surprisingly shtum on this particular subject, at least since making clear in 2023 that he did not support Kennedy’s presidential campaign. Maybe that will change when David premieres his forthcoming HBO sketch series about American history? It’s produced, in part, by a very different president: Barack Obama. Hines, for her part, told Billy Bush this week that they are not in close touch: “I haven’t talked to him in a while,” she said. “I love Larry, and I think Larry loves me. I think it’s just politics.”

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  • Doctors on key US health task force accused of prioritizing DEI over evidence-based medicine

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    An “independent” advisory panel of non-federal experts determining which preventative healthcare services insurers must cover is accused of being staffed with doctors who have shown a propensity to prioritize “woke” left-wing diversity, equity and inclusion ideals in their work, as opposed to evidence-based science.

    The U.S. Preventative Services Task Force (USPSTF), an all-volunteer panel of doctors who serve four-year terms appointed by the Secretary of Health, is made up of experts in preventative medicine, which includes services like screening tests, immunizations, behavioral counseling, and medications that can prevent the development or worsening of health conditions. One of the task force’s primary functions is to weigh the efficacy and cost-benefit of such preventative care services, recommendations for which are then used to shape what preventative care services insurance providers must cover.

    The task force’s ability to make these healthcare recommendations, coupled with what appears to be a membership largely made up of left-wing, DEI proponents, has raised concerns about how the task force could be impacting healthcare. 

    The Wall Street Journal reported in July that sources with knowledge of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s thinking said he was planning to dismiss all 16 members of the USPSTF for being too “woke.” 

    NEW MEDICAL POLICY CENTER COMBATS WOKENESS IN MEDICINE, LAUNCHING LANDMARK RANKING OF TOP SCHOOLS

    RFK Jr. speaks at the 2025 Rx and Illicit Drug Summit at Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, April 24, 2025. (© Nicole Hester / The Tennessean / USA TODAY NETWORK)

    “HHS has been made aware of the ideological issues with members of the USPSTF raised by letters from Senate Republicans, members of the GOP Doctors Caucus, and a large group of physicians including Associations of American Physicians and Surgeons, America’s Frontline Doctors, and the Pennsylvania Direct Primary Care Association. HHS is troubled by these allegations and is investigating further,” Emily Hilliard, a Health and Human Services Department spokesperson told Fox News Digital when asked about Kennedy’s plans for the future of the current USPSTF.

    Meanwhile, others, including the GOP Doctors Caucus and major physician groups including the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, have also raised alarm bells about potential left-wing bias at the USPSTF. One group that has also raised alarm bells about the USPSTF is the conservative watchdog group known as the American Accountability Foundation (AAF), which just released a new report claiming the USPSTF “has been thoroughly hijacked by left-wing partisans for the purpose of weaponizing science to spread leftist ideology.”

    The AAF report points to Dr. Michael Silverstein, the task force’s current chairman, who, in 2023, said that USPSTF is “dedicated to … addressing critical issues of health equity” after he was re-appointed to the task force’s leadership team under the Biden administration. As Vice Chair of the task force in 2023, Silverstein co-authored an annual report to Congress highlighting a new partnership with the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association (GLMA) aimed at helping the task force be more “inclusive.”

    The partnership, according to the report to Congress, was meant to help develop “new recommendations on screening for anxiety disorders, and other conditions that affect LGBTQ+ communities to enhance the health, wellness, and quality of life of their patients.”

    Other recommendations from the USPSTF that have come down in the last several years include a 2022 recommendation denoting the need for physicians to consider race when screening for anxiety in children and adolescents. A more recent recommendation, published in April, said that doctors should pay special attention to breastfeeding in black mothers due to the “lasting psychological impact and stigma of enslaved Black women being forced to act as wet nurses.” 

    I’M A GENDER DETRANSITIONER. I TOLD THE FTC HOW DOCTORS ABUSED THEIR POWER OVER ME     

    Denver-Health

    Denver, CO – APRIL 25 : Medical doctor Alia Broman, right, examines a 6 years old patient at Denver Health in Denver, Colorado on Thursday, April 25, 2024.  (Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post))

    Meanwhile, a 2021 report from the USPSTF, on addressing sex and gender when making preventative healthcare recommendations, included an analysis of how gender-specific terminology, as opposed to “gender-neutral” terminology, could play a role in addressing the needs of “diverse populations.” Think “pregnant people” versus “pregnant mother,” a switch that eventually became part of the task force’s official guidelines. 

    “To advance its methods, the USPSTF reviewed its past recommendations that included the use of sex and gender terms, reviewed the approaches of other guideline-making bodies, and pilot tested strategies to address sex and gender diversity,” the report states. “Based on the findings, the USPSTF intends to use an inclusive approach to identify issues related to sex and gender at the start of the guideline development process; assess the applicability, variability, and quality of evidence as a function of sex and gender; ensure clarity in the use of language regarding sex and gender; and identify evidence gaps related to sex and gender.”

    Another major achievement towards the task force’s mission to advance “health equity” was the release of a 2024 “Health Equity Framework” aimed at embedding gender theory and other left-wing ideologies into its operations. 

    HOW UNIVERSITY INDOCTRINATION TURNED DEADLY, AND WHY ONE SCHOLAR SAYS IT’S ONLY GETTING WORSE  

    In addition to the work the task force has done, its members also have an extensive history of publishing research that focuses on “health equity” and other DEI components, such as how race impacts certain health outcomes, or how to address sex and gender when making recommendations for clinical preventative services.

    “National Institutes of Health Pathways to Prevention Workshop: Achieving Health Equity in Preventive Services,” is the title of a scientific research report co-authored by task force rank-and-file member, Dr. Sandra Millon Underwood. “Further Incorporating Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Into Medical Education Research,” and “Health Equity Starts with Us: Recommendations from the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute Racial Justice and Health Equity Task Force,” were also reports co-authored by members of the USPSTF.

    “Antiracist initiatives, such as incorporating community-support persons (e.g., lay doulas) into maternity care for Black people, can reduce disparities in outcomes by addressing both interpersonal racism and the lack of workforce diversity caused by structural racism,” stated a May 2024 research paper co-authored by USPSTF rank-and-file member Dr. Alicia Fernandez.

    Doctor seen next to Diversity, Equity and Inclusion image

    The U.S. Preventative Services Task Force (USPSTF) has been accused of being infiltrated by “woke” leftists, with sources familiar with Heath Secretary Robert F. Kennedy saying he has plans to fire all 16 of them.  (iStock; Getty Images)

    Members of the supposedly “independent” USPSTF have also used their positions of expertise to fight Trump administration priorities as well, such as those around abortion and research funding reforms. 

    For example, Dr. David Chelmow, another task force member, has appeared in several physician-backed American Civil Liberties Union memos about efforts opposing the Trump administration, including one challenging Trump’s efforts to implement greater protections around the mail-order abortion drug called mifepristone, which many pro-life OBGYN’s have warned is dangerous if not dispensed in-person. In March, Dr. Carlos Roberto Jaen, another task force member, signed a letter alongside 1,900 others accusing the Trump administration of weakening US research capacity and endangering Americans.

    WHAT’S REALLY IN YOUR FOOD? NEW CAMPAIGN PUSHES FOR NATIONAL INGREDIENT TRANSPARENCY 

    When making recommendations for preventative care services, the USPSTF assigns a letter grade, A, B, C, D, or I. 

    Any service given an “A” or “B” grade, is required to be covered by private insurers under a mandate in the Affordable Care Act (ACA). These grades are also tied to coverage requirements for public insurers, like Medicare and Medicaid. 

    In 2019, the task force gave the precautionary anti-HIV drug Preexposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) an “A” grade, guidelines for which were later clarified in 2023. The task force’s current Vice Chair, Dr. John Wong, also co-authored a 2017 paper on how scaling-up the use of PrEP can help reduce the prevalence of HIV among gay men. But, according to AAF, the active promotion of PrEP creates an atmosphere of dangerous sexual activity that risks public health dangers due to what the foundation says is promotion of risky sexual behaviors. Additionally, at least one Christian-owned business has argued that forcing insurance providers to cover medication that promotes risky sexual behaviors violates their rights.

    Earlier this summer, the Supreme Court weighed in on whether the USPSTF’s authority to compel coverage of preventative healthcare it gives either an “A” or “B” grade was unconstitutional. The group that brought the case, Braidwood Management Inc., initially objected on religious grounds to the ACA requirement that insurance providers cover certain HIV-prevention medications for which the task force has issued an “A” recommendation, specifically PrEP. However, the case ultimately morphed into a question over the legitimacy of USPSTF’s recommendation authority, and whether the circumvention of Senate approval for its members was allowed by the Constitutions Article II clause on advise and consent.

    Supreme Court

    The facade of the Supreme Court building at dusk is shown in this photo. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

    Both the Biden and Trump administrations have taken up the argument that the Health Secretary alone has ultimate control over whether to appoint or fire USPSTF members. The Trump administration also argued in its briefs to the High Court that the Secretary had the authority to block, or rescind, task force recommendations as well, according to SCOUTS Blog.   

    Ultimately, the Supreme Court voted 6-3, in favor of the federal government’s argument that the appointment process for the USPSTF, and therefore its legitimacy, did not violate the Constitution.

    Shortly after the Supreme Court’s decision in the Braidwood case, Health Secretary Kennedy reportedly postponed a long-scheduled task force meeting of the USPSTF, which was the same move he made before firing every member of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), the main federal entity that helps craft federal vaccine policy. Kennedy has long been a critic of conventional vaccination policies and practices.    

    The Wall Street Journal reported in July, not long after the Supreme Court’s decision in the Braidwood case, that sources familiar with Kennedy’s thinking said he was planning to dismiss all 16 members of the USPSTF for being too “woke.”

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  • Trump’s Operation Warp Speed sparks GOP call for Nobel Peace Prize after ceasefire snub

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    FIRST ON FOX: A pair of Senate Republicans plan to nominate President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize for his role in fast-tracking the production and distribution of vaccines during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., and Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso, R-Wyo., plan to introduce a resolution that would formally nominate Trump for the prize for launching Operation Warp Speed at the onset of the pandemic in 2020.

    The executive action saw a large-scale collaboration among multiple federal agencies and private companies to fast-track the research, development and distribution of vaccines during the pandemic, and was funded by billions from the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act. 

    The lawmakers’ push comes after Trump expressed his desire to win the Peace Prize for his involvement in striking a deal between Israel and Hamas, and shortly after the prize committee passed over him. It’s also the most recent in a string of nomination pushes from congressional Republicans. 

    MIKE JOHNSON, WORLD LEADERS TO NOMINATE TRUMP FOR NOBEL PEACE PRIZE AFTER ISRAEL-HAMAS DEAL

    A pair of Senate Republicans want to nominate President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize for his role in fast-tracking the production and distribution of vaccines during the COVID-19 pandemic. (Getty Images)

    Both Cassidy and Barrasso, who were doctors before becoming legislators, lauded the massive mobilization effort and credited Operation Warp Speed for saving millions of lives during the pandemic.

    “When Americans needed a vaccine in record time to stop a once-in-a-generation pandemic, President Trump delivered,” Cassidy said. “The Nobel Prize has been given for a lot less. He should receive the next one!”

    Barrasso contended that Operation Warp Speed would “not have been possible without President Trump’s bold leadership.”

    REPUBLICAN DOCTORS CLASH WITH RFK JR OVER VACCINES IN TENSE SENATE SHOWDOWN

    Sen. Bill Cassidy speaks during a hearing

    Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., ranking member on the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, participates in a hearing at the Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington, Feb. 8, 2024. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

    “He bent an infamously slow bureaucracy to his will to bring a vaccine to market in under a year. Operation Warp Speed saved millions of lives in the United States and millions more lives around the world. President Trump deserves the Nobel Peace Prize for his life-saving achievement,” he said.

    Other congressional Republicans have sought to nominate Trump for the award for varying achievements this year, including his involvement in striking a deal to see the end of the Israel-Hamas War. 

    And Dr. Mehmet Oz, who Trump tapped as administrator for the Centers for Medicaid & Medicare Services, argued the president should win the prize for Operation Warp Speed, which he called a “a massive success for our country.” 

    But their push to nominate Trump for his role in vaccine development comes after both lawmakers sparred with Human Health and Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., during a Senate hearing last month following turmoil at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and questions over his stance on vaccines.

    ‘PRESIDENT OF PEACE’: TRUMP TAPPED FOR NOBEL PRIZE AMID TALKS TO END RUSSIA-UKRAINE WAR

    Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso, R-Wyo., speaks during a press conference.

    Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso, R-Wyo., contended that Operation Warp Speed would “not have been possible without President Trump’s bold leadership.” (Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    Cassidy pressed Kennedy during his appearance before the Senate Finance Committee in September, where the HHS Secretary agreed that Trump should win the prize for Operation Warp Speed.

    “Absolutely, senator,” Kennedy said.

    However, at the time, Cassidy questioned Kennedy’s actions against vaccines prior to his role as HHS Secretary — and while leading the agency — that appeared to counter his support for Operation Warp Speed.

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    Kennedy countered that he began litigating against former President Joe Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine mandates and not against Trump’s push with Operation Warp Speed.

    “First of all, the reason that Operation Warp Speed was genius is it did something nobody ever [had] done — I don’t think any president but President Trump could do it — it got the vaccine to market that was perfectly matched to the virus at that time,” Kennedy said. 

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  • Tylenol’s maker pushes back against possible label change linking pain reliever’s use in pregnancy to autism

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    (CNN) — Kenvue, the American company that makes Tylenol, says the US Food and Drug Administration should not make proposed changes to the product’s safety label to reflect research about a possible connection between its use in pregnancy and diagnoses of autism or ADHD in children.

    Kenvue says that acetaminophen, the generic name for the painkiller and fever reducer also known as paracetamol, is “one of the most studied medicines in history” and that “adoption of the proposed labeling revisions would be arbitrary, capricious, and contrary to law.”

    Tylenol generates $1 billion annually for the company and is considered the company’s biggest-selling brand, according to the brokerage Morningstar.

    The current label instructs people who are pregnant or breastfeeding to “ask a health professional before use.”

    The push for a label change came after President Donald Trump held a news conference last month in which he told pregnant women who are in pain to try to “tough it out” instead of taking Tylenol, even though acetaminophen is the one over-the-counter pain reliever considered safe for pregnant people to take.

    The president claimed without evidence that Tylenol use during pregnancy was linked to a “very increased risk of autism.”

    “Fight like hell not to take it,” Trump urged.

    Most people use acetaminophen at some point during their pregnancy, studies show. Other common pain or fever treatments like ibuprofen or regular-dose aspirin can increase the risk of serious complications when used during pregnancy.

    Untreated pain or fever can be dangerous for the mother and the fetus, possibly leading to problems like miscarriage, birth defects or high blood pressure.

    Beginning the process to change the safety label on acetaminophen products was just one action the Trump administration planned to take.

    US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said at the news conference last month that his agency would launch a public service campaign about the issue.

    The FDA also sent a letter to physicians saying that the choice to take Tylenol “still belongs with parents” but that use during pregnancy may cause an “increased risk of neurological conditions such as autism and ADHD in children.”

    However, the letter also noted that “a causal relationship has not been established” and that studies about a link are “contradictory.”

    The Informed Consent Action Network, an anti-vaccine nonprofit with close ties Kennedy, said in a letter dated the day of Trump’s news conference that it had filed a citizen’s petition with the FDA. Such filings are a way for individuals, industry or consumer groups to ask the agency to take action on a specific issue.

    The petition says that because of the “urgent public health implications,” the FDA should act quickly to add a more detailed warning to the labels of over-the-counter drug products that contain acetaminophen to spell out that “studies show that frequent use of this product during pregnancy may increase your child’s risk of neurodevelopmental disorders, including autism spectrum disorder and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.”

    On Friday, Kenvue asked the FDA to deny the petition, saying that suggested changes to the label are unsupported by scientific evidence “and would represent an unexplained departure from FDA’s longstanding position on acetaminophen during pregnancy.”

    The company said it met with Kennedy in early September, after the HHS secretary reached out to say he believed there was a connection between acetaminophen use during pregnancy and autism, and it told him there was no such link.

    An HHS spokesperson said Monday that the FDA doesn’t comment on product-specific matters.

    The FDA website on acetaminophen has not changed to reflect the Trump administration’s views. It says it was last updated in August and specifies, “to date, FDA has not found clear evidence that appropriate use of acetaminophen during pregnancy causes adverse pregnancy, birth, neurobehavioral, or developmental outcomes.”

    Acetaminophen has been studied for decades to find any problems it may cause in pregnancy, according to the American College of Obstetricians & Gynecologists. Not one reputable study has concluded that acetaminophen use in any trimester of pregnancy causes neurodevelopmental disorders in children.

    That group points to a study published last year of more than 2 million children that found no significant associations between acetaminophen use during pregnancy and children’s risk of autism, ADHD or intellectual disability.

    Another study published in August analyzed 46 studies on acetaminophen use during pregnancy and neurodevelopmental disorders. Six of the studies specifically examined acetaminophen use and autism. Overall, the analysis concluded that there was “strong evidence of an association” between acetaminophen use during pregnancy and autism, but the authors were careful to say that the paper could only show an association, the research could not show that acetaminophen caused autism.

    “We recommend judicious acetaminophen use — lowest effective dose, shortest duration — under medical guidance, tailored to individual risk–benefit assessments, rather than a broad limitation,” the researchers wrote in that analysis.

    After the Trump news conference, medicine regulatory agencies for the European Union and the United Kingdom and Health Canada quickly issued statements confirming that taking the over-the-counter pain-reliever during pregnancy remains safe.

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    Jen Christensen and CNN

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  • RFK’s HHS probes chemtrails falsehood, weather manipulation

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    While plowing a wheat field in rural Washington state in the 1990s, William Wallace spotted a gray plane overhead that he believed was releasing chemicals to make him sick. The rancher began to suspect that all white vapor trails from aircraft might be dangerous.

    He shared his concern with reporters, acknowledging it sounded a little like “The X Files,” a science fiction television show.

    Academics cite Wallace’s story as one of the catalysts behind a fringe concept that has spread among adherents to the Make America Healthy Again, or MAHA, movement and is gaining traction at the highest levels of the federal government. Its treatment as a serious issue underscores that under President Donald Trump, unscientific ideas have unusual power to take hold and shape public health policy.

    The concept posits that airplane vapor trails, or contrails, are really “chemtrails” containing toxic substances that poison people and the terrain. Another version alleges planes or devices are being deployed by the federal government, private companies, or researchers to trigger big weather changes, such as hurricanes, or to alter the Earth’s climate, emitting hazardous chemicals in the process.

    Several Republican lawmakers and leaders in the Trump administration remain convinced the concepts are legitimate, though scientists have sought to discredit such claims.

    Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is planning to investigate climate and weather control, and is expected to create a task force that will recommend possible federal action, according to a former agency official, an internal agency memo obtained by KFF Health News and a consultant who helped with the memo.

    The plans, along with comments by top Republican lawmakers, show how rumors and conspiracy theories can gain an air of legitimacy due to social media and a political climate infused with falsehoods, some political scientists and researchers say.

    “When we have low access to information or low trust in our sources of information, a lot of times we turn to our peer groups, the groups we are members of and we define ourselves by,” said Timothy Tangherlini, a folklorist and professor of information at the University of California-Berkeley. He added that the government’s investigation of conspiracy theories “gives the impression of having some authoritative element.”

    HHS is expected to appoint a special government employee to investigate climate and weather control, according to Gray Delany, former head of the agency’s MAHA agenda, who said he drafted the memo. The agency has interviewed applicants to lead a “chemtrails” task force, said Jim Lee, a blogger focused on weather and climate who Delany said helped edit the memo, which Lee confirmed.

    “HHS does not comment on future or potential policy decisions and task forces,” agency spokesperson Emily Hilliard said in an email.

    The memo alleges that “aerosolized heavy metals such as Aluminum, Barium and Strontium, as well as other materials such as sulfuric acid precursors, are sprayed into the atmosphere under the auspices of combatting global warming,” through a process of stratospheric aerosol injection, or SAI.

    “There are serious concerns SAI spraying is leading to increased heavy metal content in the atmosphere,” the memo states.

    The memo claims, without providing evidence, that the substances cause elevated heavy-metal content in the atmosphere, soil and waterways, and that aluminum is a toxic product used in SAI linked to dementia, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, asthma-like illnesses, and other chronic illnesses. The July 14 memo was addressed to White House health adviser Calley Means, who didn’t respond to a voicemail left by a reporter seeking comment.

    High-level federal government officials are presenting false claims as facts without evidence and referring to events that not only haven’t occurred but, in many cases, are physically impossible, said Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the University of California.

    “That is a pretty shocking memo,” he said. “It doesn’t get more tinfoil hat. They really believe toxins are being sprayed.”

    Kennedy has previously promoted debunked chemtrail theories. This spring, he was asked on “Dr. Phil Primetime” about chemicals being sprayed into the stratosphere to change the Earth’s climate.

    “It’s done, we think, by DARPA,” Kennedy said, referring to a Department of Defense agency that develops emerging technology for the military’s use. “And a lot of it now is coming out of the jet fuel. Those materials are put in jet fuel. I’m going to do everything in my power to stop it. We’re bringing on somebody who’s going to think only about that.”

    DARPA officials didn’t return a message seeking comment.

    Federal messaging

    Deploying chemtrails to poison people is just one of many baseless conspiracy theories that have found traction among Trump administration health policy officials led by Kennedy, a longtime anti-vaccine activist before entering politics. He continues to promote a supposed link between vaccines and autism, as well as make statements connecting fluoride in drinking water to arthritis, bone fractures, thyroid disease, and cancer. The World Health Organization says fluoride is safe when used as recommended.

    Delany, who was ousted in August from HHS, said Kennedy has expressed strong interest in chemtrails.

    “This is an issue that really matters to MAHA,” said Delany, referring to the informal movement associated with Kennedy that is composed of people who are skeptical of evidence-based medicine.

    The memo also alleges that “suspicious weather events have been occurring and have increased awareness of the issue to the public, some of which have been acknowledged to have been caused by geoengineering activities, such as the flooding in Dubai in 2024.” Geoengineering refers to intentional large-scale efforts to change the climate to counteract global warming.

    “It is unconscionable that anyone should be allowed to spray known neurotoxins and environmental toxins over our nation’s citizens, their land, food and water supplies,” Delany’s memo states.

    Scientists, meteorologists, and other branches of the federal government say these assertions are largely incorrect. Some points in the memo are accurate, including concerns that commercial aircraft contribute to acid rain.

    But critics say the memo builds on kernels of truth before veering into unscientific fringe theories. Efforts to control the weather are being made, largely by states and local governments seeking to combat droughts, but the results are modest and highly localized. It isn’t possible to manipulate large-scale weather events, scientists say.

    Severe flooding in the United Arab Emirates in 2024 couldn’t have been caused by weather manipulation because no technology could create that kind of rainfall event, Maarten Ambaum, a meteorologist at the University of Reading who studies Gulf region rainfall patterns, said in a statement on the floods. Similar debunked claims emerged this year after central Texas experienced devastating floods.

    The Government Accountability Office concluded in a 2024 report that questions remain as to the effectiveness of weather modification.

    Research into changing the climate has been conducted, including work by one private company that engaged in field tests. Still, federal agencies say no ongoing or large-scale projects are underway. Study of the concept remains in the research phase. The Environmental Protection Agency says there are no large-scale or government efforts to affect the Earth’s climate.

    “Solar geoengineering is not occurring via direct delivery by commercial aircraft and is not associated with aviation contrails,” the agency says on its website.

    Widespread misinformation

    Misperceptions about weather, climate control, and airplane contrails extend beyond the Trump administration, scientists said.

    In September, a congressional House committee hearing titled “Playing God With the Weather — A Disastrous Forecast” involved two hours of debate on the once-fringe idea. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., who chaired the hearing, has introduced legislation to ban weather and climate control, with a fine of up to $100,000 and up to five years in prison.

    Some Democrats objected to the nature of the discussion. Rep. Melanie Stansbury, D-N.M., accused Greene of using “the platform of Congress to proffer anti-science theories, to platform climate denialism.”

    Frequently citing chemtrails, GOP lawmakers have introduced legislation in about two dozen states to ban weather modification or geoengineering. Florida passed a bill to establish an online portal so residents can report alleged violations.

    “The Free State of Florida means freedom from governments or private actors unilaterally applying chemicals or geoengineering to people or public spaces,” Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said in a press statement this spring.

    Meanwhile, the chemtrail conspiracy has permeated popular culture. The title track on singer Lana Del Ray’s seventh studio album is entitled “Chemtrails Over the Country Club.” Bill Maher dove into the chemtrail myth on his podcast “Club Random,” saying, “This is nuts. It’s just nuts.” And “Chemtrails,” a psychological thriller, wrapped filming in July.

    Social media has given wing to the chemtrails concept and other fringe ideas involving public health. They include an outlandish belief that Anthony Fauci, who advised both Trump and President Joe Biden on the government response to the covid-19 pandemic, created the AIDS epidemic. There is no evidence of such a link, public health leaders say.

    Researchers say another false belief by those on the far right holds that people who received covid vaccines could shed the virus, causing infertility in the unvaccinated. There is no evidence of such a connection, scientists and researchers say.

    More severe weather events due to global warming may be driving some of the baseless theories, scientists say. And risks occur when such ideas take hold among the general population or policymakers, some public health leaders say. Climate researchers, including Swain, say they’ve received death threats.

    Lee, the blogger, said he disagrees with some of the more far-fetched beliefs and is aware of the harm they can cause.

    “There are people wanting to shoot down planes because they think they are chemtrails,” said Lee, adding that some believers are afraid to venture outside when plane vapor trails are visible overhead.

    There is also no evidence that plane contrails cause health problems or are related to intentional efforts to control the climate, according to the EPA and other scientists.

    The memo and focus at HHS on climate and weather control are alarming because they perpetuate conspiracies, said David Keith, a professor of geophysical sciences at the University of Chicago.

    “It’s unmoored to reality,” he said. “I expected there were documents like this, but seeing it in print is nevertheless shocking. Our government is being driven by nonsensical dreck from dark corners of social media.”

    This article first appeared on KFF Health News.

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  • Cheryl Hines says she is ‘very worried’ about husband RFK Jr’s safety amid political tension

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    U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.‘s wife Cheryl Hines admitted she is fearful for her husband’s safety following the assassination of Charlie Kirk.  

    Hines opened up to Fox News about marrying into the Kennedy family and touched on the importance of acknowledging differing political viewpoints, revealing she worries about her husband’s safety. Her memoir “Unscripted,” which in part reveals her life with Kennedy, will be released Nov. 11.

    “I am very worried,” Hines told “Jesse Watters Primetime.” “It can’t be, ‘Because you don’t think like me, I hate you.’ That’s what it feels like sometimes.”  

    ACTRESS CHERYL HINES CLASHES WITH ‘THE VIEW’ OVER HER HUSBAND RFK JR’S RECORD SERVING AMERICANS 

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr., secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), and his wife, actress Cheryl Hines, during a ceremony in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 13, 2025. (Jason C. Andrew/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    She reflected on how her husband, a previous Democrat turned independent, and President Donald Trump had a number of similar goals and decided to collaborate, placing Kennedy “in the middle of a Republican administration.” 

    “If someone didn’t vote the same way you voted, instead of saying, ‘Oh, you’re stupid, you don’t know what you’re doing!’ — ‘Why did you vote for this person?’ or ‘Why do you believe this, about this issue?’ Then, really let it in what their response is, because maybe you’ll start to understand each other more.”  

    Hines explained that the “Make America Healthy Again” movement is about a lifestyle, rather than making sure every decision one makes in their daily habits is perfect. 

    While Hines said she is as MAHA as her husband, she will indulge in certain foods he will not.   

    “Overall, going through the days, you’re trying to make the healthiest choices and you’re trying to do what’s best for your body to keep you healthy,” she said. “That’s basically it.”

    President Donald Trump, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., and Cheryl Hines stand together in the White House.

    President Donald Trump, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Cheryl Hines stand together in the Oval Office.  (Jason C. Andrew/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    In his first few months in office, RFK Jr. worked to investigate the causes of declining U.S. health. Recently, the HHS secretary reported that the Trump administration is “mobilizing every part of government to confront the childhood chronic disease epidemic.”

    “This strategy represents the most sweeping reform agenda in modern history — realigning our food and health systems, driving education, and unleashing science to protect America’s children and families,” Kennedy said, according to an HHS statement. “We are ending the corporate capture of public health, restoring transparency, and putting gold-standard science — not special interests — at the center of every decision.” 

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

    Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and Cheryl Hines greet supporters.

    Actress Cheryl Hines and her husband, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., greet supporters during a campaign event in Oakland, California.  (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

    Kennedy’s wife expressed pride in her husband’s work to bring health to Americans and shared that from the time they met, it felt so “easy” to be welcomed into the Kennedy family. 

    “It is so amazing to have Bobby leading this MAHA movement where you’re watching some of the things that he’s accomplished, like getting rid of petroleum-based dyes in food, getting rid of ingredients in our food that other countries don’t allow, looking at baby formula and getting rid the arsenic and the lead that’s in it,” she said. “When you see some of these accomplishments, first of all, you wonder why it’s all like this to begin with, but second of all, I’m really proud that Bobby’s the person leading the charge.” 

    Fox News Digital’s Alec Schemmel contributed to this report. 

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  • A Quarter of the CDC Is Gone

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    After the latest round of mass firings at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention over the weekend, the union that represents agency employees estimates that around 3,000 people this year—about a quarter of the agency’s workforce—have departed the agency.

    That number includes workers affected by layoffs earlier this year, as well those who have accepted the Trump administration’s “Fork in the Road” buyout program.

    The most recent cuts came down amid the ongoing government shutdown. On October 10, more than 1,300 CDC employees received termination notices. Soon after, however, about 700 of those people were told via email that they were mistakenly terminated and were not in fact subject to the reduction in force. An estimated 600 people remain terminated.

    An additional 1,300 CDC employees are, according to the union, on administrative leave and being paid but not working.

    The Trump administration has not shared official numbers of those targeted by the reductions. The estimate was compiled by the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) Local 2883, which represents CDC workers.

    The current round of reductions affects the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, the National Center for Health Statistics, the CDC library, the agency’s human resources department, campus safety staff, as well as the CDC’s office in Washington, DC, which acts as a liaison to Congress and provides public health information to policymakers.

    “All HHS employees receiving reduction-in-force notices were designated nonessential by their respective divisions,” Andrew Nixon, director of communication at the Department of Health and Human Services, told WIRED via email.

    Among those reinstated include staff that publish the agency’s flagship publication, the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, as well as leadership in the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases and National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, according to AFGE. Members of the Epidemic Intelligence Service, the CDC’s “disease detectives” unit, were also brought back.

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    Emily Mullin

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  • RFK Jr. Complains About TikTok Video of Woman Taking Tylenol With a ‘Baby in Her Placenta’

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    President Donald Trump held one of his televised “cabinet meetings” from the White House on Thursday, which mostly serves as an opportunity for members of the Trump regime to fawn over the president in nauseating ways. But Trump’s health secretary took the opportunity to embarrass himself Thursday in a way that reminds us he’s grossly unqualified.

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the head of Health and Human Services (HHS), recently held a press conference with Trump to declare that pregnant women should no longer take Tylenol during pregnancy, in an attempt to claim that it causes autism. Kennedy brought up the topic on Thursday, mentioning a TikTok video he saw.

    “Somebody showed me a TikTok video of a pregnant woman at 8 months pregnant—she’s an associate professor at the Columbia Medical School—and she is saying ‘F Trump’ and gobbling Tylenol with her baby in her placenta,” Kennedy said Thursday.

    “The level of Trump Derangement Syndrome has now left the political landscapes and it is now a pathology,” Kennedy continued.

    RFK Jr: “Somebody showed me a TikTok video of a pregnant woman at 8 months pregnant — she’s an associate professor at the Columbia Medical School — and she is saying ‘F Trump’ and gobbling Tylenol with her baby in her placenta. The level of Trump Derangement Syndrome is now a pathology.”

    [image or embed]

    — Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) October 9, 2025 at 9:56 AM

    Putting aside for a moment the debate over Tylenol, any educated adult with two brain cells to rub together can see a big problem with what Kennedy just said.

    As one doctor on Bluesky put it: “as a physician, I’ll note that if you have a fetus in your placenta then something has gone quite wrong indeed.” The placenta is an organ that grows in the uterus and provides nutrients transferred from the mother to the fetus. A fetus does not grow “in” a placenta, as Kennedy claimed on Thursday.

    It’s not entirely clear what TikTok video Kennedy was referring to, but the Russian propaganda account RT posted a video Sept. 23 showing a woman who was taking Tylenol while 28 weeks pregnant. The video became popular on TikTok, and RT claims the woman is a “teaching doctor at New York’s Columbia University,” though the TikTok account has been set to private, and Gizmodo could not confirm the person’s employment.

    The video shared by RT appears to show the woman taking just one pill and saying Tylenol “works like a charm and my baby won’t have autism.” She also doesn’t say “eff Trump.” The idea that pregnant women were “gobbling” Tylenol in large quantities was a meme among the far-right in the immediate aftermath of the press conference from Kennedy and Trump. But the videos that went viral largely appeared to show women taking one or two pills rather than “chugging” Tylenol as was so often claimed.

    There were also unverified videos on TikTok and Instagram of people claiming that women were dying from overdosing on Tylenol as a way to oppose Trump. There’s no evidence that anyone overdosed on Tylenol as a way to stick it to Trump, despite what random people on social media have tried to claim.

    What about this claim that she had a “baby in her placenta”? Kennedy’s ignorance of basic biological facts is disturbing, but not altogether surprising. As the son of former Attorney General Robert Kennedy and nephew of President John F. Kennedy, the current health secretary has lived an existence of immense privilege that allowed him to coast through life. Kennedy, who was addicted to heroin for 14 years, has claimed that the drug helped him be a better student. But Kennedy is not nearly as bright as he thinks he is.

    To give just one particularly galling example of his ignorance, the health secretary has written about the fact that he doesn’t believe in germ theory. Kennedy believes in something called miasma theory, which was popular in the early 19th century before science advanced to understand germs. As Ars Technica notes, Kennedy doesn’t even seem to understand miasma theory. And back in May, Kennedy posted photos of himself bathing in sewage-tainted water.

    Kennedy also tried to suggest on Thursday that circumcision could be linked to autism because kids are given Tylenol after the procedure. Then he immediately backtracked and said “none of this is dispositive,” apparently admitting he was talking out of his ass and there was no definitive causation.

    Besides linking Tylenol in pregnant women to autism, RFK Jr. now says circumcision is part of the reason why kids are autistic.

    “Children who are circumcised early have double the rate of autism, and it’s highly likely because they’re given Tylenol. None of this is positive…”

    [image or embed]

    — Justin Baragona (@justinbaragona.bsky.social) October 9, 2025 at 10:10 AM

    Kennedy, a long-time anti-vaccine activist, also accidentally admitted that he was trying to find studies to fit his agenda rather than actually following the science.

    President Trump has assembled some of the most unqualified people who have ever served in government. And they’re all doing everything they can to dismantle the U.S., whether it’s deploying troops to invade U.S. cities, cutting a billion dollars in food for schools and food banks, or trying to abolish the Department of Education.

    Trump will continue to chip away at everything Americans hold dear as long as he holds office. (Did you hear him declare that he had to “take away” freedom of speech yesterday?) And people like Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will continue to make idiotic statements that would’ve been fireable offenses in literally any other political era.

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    Matt Novak

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  • People’s Trust in the CDC Under Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Has Cratered, Poll Shows

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    Americans are losing faith in the country’s health agencies. A new KFF poll shows that people’s trust in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has reached a low not seen since the covid-19 pandemic.

    The poll offers a glimpse into how Americans are feeling about the country’s public health agencies since U.S. President Donald Trump returned to the White House in January, and since his controversial pick for health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., took the reins at the Department of Health and Human Services.

    The poll found that just half of Americans still trust the CDC to provide reliable information about vaccines—far below the level of trust that people have in their own doctors or other health organizations. A majority also said they disapproved of Kennedy’s job performance, and that they disagreed with the Trump administration’s decision to link autism to women taking acetaminophen (Tylenol) during pregnancy despite a lack of evidence.

    Declining trust

    For the poll, KFF surveyed a nationally representative sample of more than 1,300 American adults online and by telephone, and it was conducted a day after Trump and Kennedy held a widely criticized press conference last month claiming that Tylenol use during pregnancy causes autism.

    Only 18% of the poll’s respondents expressed a “great deal” of confidence in the CDC’s vaccine information, while a further 32% said they had a “fair amount” of trust. These figures represent a sharp decline in the space of just months: An earlier poll taken in April this year found 59% of people said they trusted the CDC to some extent. Still, faith in the CDC had been waning: In 2023, 63% of people said they trusted the CDC at least somewhat. When considering similar polls evaluating public trust in the CDC as a whole, this is the lowest level of trust in the agency since the start of the covid-19 pandemic in early 2020, according to KFF.

    Conversely, a strong majority of people (83%) still trust their personal doctor to give them reliable vaccine information, while roughly two-thirds of people surveyed also trust the American Medical Association (64%) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (69%) to do the same. About 80% of Americans also agreed that public schools should require some vaccines for students, including 75% of Republicans.

     

    The RFK Jr. effect

    The new poll jibes with other recent surveys that suggest Kennedy is not popular with most Americans.

    About 59% of respondents disapproved of his overall job performance, while 62% disapproved of how he’s handled vaccine policy. Kennedy has a decades-long history of vaccine skepticism, and since his appointment to lead HHS, he has made several moves that have seemed poised to undermine vaccine policy and challenge decades-worth of accepted science—actions that have helped fuel the internal collapse of the CDC.

    Earlier this summer, former CDC director Susan Monarez was fired after she allegedly refused to rubber stamp the recommendations made by a panel composed of Kennedy’s picks to inform the CDC’s vaccine policies, many of whom have their own track record of attacking vaccine safety and voicing skepticism. Following her departure, the current acting CDC chief Jim O’Neill—another Kennedy backer—has since called for the measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine to be broken up, a longtime goal of the anti-vaccination movement.

     

    The KFF poll also found that most Americans (77%) did hear about Trump’s claim that Tylenol use increases the risk of autism. But only a very few said that this claim was “definitely true” (4%), while 30% said it was “probably true.” About 35% said the claim was “definitely false” and another 30% said it was “probably false.” Perhaps somewhat surprisingly, belief in this claim was highly partisan, the poll found, with Republicans more likely to give some credence to the idea. Scientists have not found any concrete evidence of a link between Tylenol and autism, and critics have said that the president and Kennedy’s claims were based on weak and mixed evidence, at best.

    There are many reasons why Americans’ trust in the CDC and other health agencies has ebbed and flowed over time, but the polling reflects Kennedy’s rapid ascension and his overhaul of the country’s public health agencies’ approach to vaccines and children’s health.

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    Ed Cara

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