Yves here. We’ve said multiple times in comments that we threw out RFK, Jr.’s book on Fauci after we read the footnotes to the first chapter. A large proportion flat out misrepresented what the cited study or news report said. Many others invoked studies that had been debunked for poor methodologies or were extreme outliers. So it’s not surprising to see RFK, Jr. up to his old fake science tricks.
By Jackie Fortiér. Originally published at KFF Health News
A document the Department of Health and Human Services sent to lawmakers to support Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s decision to change U.S. policy on covid vaccines cites scientific studies that are unpublished or under dispute and mischaracterizes others.
One health expert called the document “willful medical disinformation” about the safety of covid vaccines for children and pregnant women.
“It is so far out of left field that I find it insulting to our members of Congress that they would actually give them something like this. Congress members are relying on these agencies to provide them with valid information, and it’s just not there,” said Mark Turrentine, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Baylor College of Medicine.
00 covid-vax-faq-finalKennedy, who was an anti-vaccine activist before taking a role in the Trump administration, announced May 27 that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would no longer recommend covid vaccines for pregnant women or healthy children, bypassing the agency’s formal process for adjusting its vaccine schedules for adults and kids. The announcement, made on the social platform X, has been met with outrage by many pediatricians and scientists.
The HHS document meant to support Kennedy’s decision, obtained by KFF Health News, was sent to members of Congress who questioned the science and process behind his move, according to one federal official who asked not to be identified because he wasn’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly.
The document has not been posted on the HHS website, though it is the first detailed explanation of Kennedy’s announcement from the agency.
Titled “Covid Recommendation FAQ,” the document distorts some legitimate studies and cites others that are disputed and unpublished, medical experts say.
HHS director of communications Andrew Nixon told KFF Health News, “There is no distortion of the studies in this document. The underlying data speaks for itself, and it raises legitimate safety concerns. HHS will not ignore that evidence or downplay it. We will follow the data and the science.”
HHS did not respond to a request to name the author of the document.
One of the studies the HHS document cites is under investigation by its publisher regarding “potential issues with the research methodology and conclusions and author conflicts of interest,” according to a link on the study’s webpage.
“This is RFK Jr.’s playbook,” said Sean O’Leary, chair of the Committee on Infectious Diseases for the American Academy of Pediatrics and an assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. “Either cherry-pick from good science or take junk science to support his premise — this has been his playbook for 20 years.”
Another study cited in the document is a preprint that has not been peer-reviewed. Under the study’s title is an alert that “it reports new medical research that has yet to be evaluated and so should not be used to guide clinical practice.” Though the preprint was made available a year ago, it has not been published in a peer-reviewed journal.
An alert in blue at the top of a preprint study cited in the HHS document informs readers the study has not been peer-reviewed. The HHS document erroneously cites the preprint as evidence of myocarditis and pericarditis occurring only in people who received a covid vaccine, and not in people infected with the covid virus. In reality, that was not the focus of the study and it did not come to that conclusion.(Screengrab of a preprint study on medRxiv.org
The FAQ supporting Kennedy’s decision claims that “post-marketing studies” of covid vaccines have identified “serious adverse effects, such as an increased risk of myocarditis and pericarditis” — conditions in which the heart’s muscle or its covering, the pericardium, suffer inflammation.
False claims that the 2024 preprint showed myocarditis and pericarditis only in people who received a covid vaccine, and not in people infected with covid, circulated on social media. One of the study’s co-authors publicly rejected that idea, because the study did not compare outcomes between people who were vaccinated and those infected with the covid virus. The study also focused only on children and adolescents. The HHS document omitted numerous otherpeer-reviewed studies that have shown that the risk of myocarditis and pericarditis is greater after contracting covid for both vaccinated and non-vaccinated people than the risk of the same complications after vaccination alone.
O’Leary said that while some cases of myocarditis were reported in vaccinated adolescent boys and young men early in the covid pandemic, the rates declined after the two initial doses of covid vaccines were spaced further apart.
Now, adolescents and adults who have not been previously vaccinated receive only one shot, and myocarditis no longer shows up in the data, O’Leary said, referring to the CDC’s Vaccine Safety Datalink. “There is no increased risk at this point that we can identify,” he said.
In two instances, the HHS memo makes claims that are actively refuted by the papers it cites to back them up. Both papers support the safety and effectiveness of covid vaccines for pregnant women.
The HHS document says that another paper it cites found “an increase in placental blood clotting in pregnant mothers who took the vaccine.” But the paper doesn’t contain any reference to placental blood clots or to pregnant women.
“I’ve now read it three times. And I cannot find that anywhere,” said Turrentine, the OB-GYN professor.
If he were grading the HHS document, “I would give this an ‘F,’” Turrentine said. “This is not supported by anything and it’s not using medical evidence.”
While members of Congress who are physicians should know to check references in the paper, they may not take the time to do so, said Neil Silverman, a professor of clinical obstetrics and gynecology who directs the Infectious Diseases in Pregnancy Program at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. “They’re going to assume this is coming from a scientific agency. So they are being hoodwinked along with everyone else who has had access to this document,” Silverman said.
The offices of three Republicans in Congress who are medical doctors serving on House and Senate committees focused on health, including Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), did not respond to requests for comment about whether they received the memo. Emily Druckman, communications director for Rep. Kim Schrier (D-Wash.), a physician serving on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, confirmed that Schrier’s office did receive a copy of the document.
“The problem is a lot of legislators and even their staffers, they don’t have the expertise to be able to pick those references apart,” O’Leary said. “But this one — I’ve seen much better anti-vaccine propaganda than this, frankly.”
C.J. Young, deputy communications director for the House Energy and Commerce Committee, confirmed that Democratic staff members of the committee received the document from HHS. In the past, he said, similar documents would help clarify the justification and scope of an administration’s policy change and could be assumed to be scientifically accurate, Young said.
“This feels like it’s breaking new ground. I don’t think that we saw this level of sloppiness or inattention to detail or lack of consideration for scientific merit under the first Trump administration,” Young said.
On June 4, Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) and Schrier introduced a bill that would require Kennedy to adopt official vaccine decisions from the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP. Young said the motivation behind the bill was Kennedy’s decision to change the covid vaccine schedule without the input of ACIP’s vaccine experts, who play a key role in setting CDC policies around vaccine schedules and access.
Kennedy announced June 9 on X that he would remove all 17 members of ACIP, citing alleged conflicts of interest he did not detail, and replace them. He announced eight replacements June 11, including people who had criticized vaccine mandates during the covid pandemic.
No shortage of bad science, which only serves to further undermine trust in public health, including the most highly effective vaccines (like measles).
It is fair, however, to acknowledge the limited effectiveness and testing of the pediatric COVID vax. Much of the testing was short term, and recommendations involved surrogate measures and modeling. The warp-speed adoption and overpromising, coupled with short study follow up time, caused serious harm, in my opinion. With legitimate studies suggesting damage from the spike protein itself, Covid prevention emphasis on effective ventilation upgrades and long covid prevention, may be more constructive
https://www.fda.gov/media/159195/download – this is the link to the original Pfizer FDA briefing (6 mo – 4 yo) “Observed estimates of vaccine effectiveness against symptomatic disease due to the Omicron variant.. include the following: 8.8% (95% CI, 7.0 to 10.5) at 25 or more weeks since primary vaccination in adults; 59.5% among adolescents 12 to 15 years of age 2 to 4 weeks after dose 2, 16.6% during month 2 after the second dose, and 9.6% during month 3 after the second dose.; and 60.1% for children 5 to 11 years of age 2 to 4 weeks after dose 2, and 28.9% during month 2 after dose 2.” 31,32,33,34
The following link is for the original 5 – 11 yo FDA request: https://www.fda.gov/media/153447/download Actual results included 19 cases, and no hospitalizations. Surrogate measures and models were used for recommendations.
Our Covid Brain Trust complained vociferously about that issue.
Yes, I clearly recall. I suspect your site helped quite a few local health departments improve understanding and locate real data – and you are still at it. Thanks!
Toby Roger’s critique of Pfizer’s study in 2021 https://tobyrogers.substack.com/p/ten-red-flags-in-the-fdas-risk-benefit
I have previously shown here that there was a huge increase in cardiac related hospitalizations in the under 40 year old cohort in BC. My FOI FOI HTH-2024-42317 was inspired by Dr. Guy Hatchard in this report https://hatchardreport.com/staggering-new-data-from-health-new-zealand-and-others/
In BC there was an almost 70% increase in hospitalizations in 2023 over the 2017-2020 average.
It is mentioned in this article that now adolescents are only receiving one vaccine not two but fails to mention that this vaccine is still being recommended 2-3 times per year. It also points out the lower efficacy and shorter duration in adolescents. Are we going to be recommending perpetual vaccinations?
Where are the studies of health effects of receiving 10 maybe 20 or even 100 mRNA vaccines over one’s life? Is it possible that your immune system is gradually being degraded by each shot? I have asked my Health Authority these questions but have hit a brick wall. My last FOI request simply asks for all deaths within 30 days of receiving any vaccination from 2017-24. This data should be available as it a requirement under the Canadian Adverse Events Following Immunization Surveillance System.
We need to be considering all cause mortality not just whether or not we are continuously getting mild Covid. What is causing the ongoing high ACM? Is the spike protein either from infection or vaccination (or both) the culprit? The following tries to answer that: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34100279/
If the spike protein is indeed causing these issues it is obvious that reducing exposure to the virus and the vaccine needs to be done.
Rather than try to argue about the details, I suggest looking at other countries. Most developed countries do not recommend covid shots for young children. Go to childhood schedule for the UK, Denmark, or Sweden, for example. They are doing just fine. Better than the US for child mortality, both covid and all cause.
Something tells me that law makers will not care how much bs is in RFK jrs policy changes. He has Trump’s support and for the Republicans, that will be all they need to know. It will all come down to political loyalties and expediencies.
My thoughts exactly, but I take a broader view.
“The problem is a lot of legislators and even their staffers, they don’t have the expertise to be able to pick those references apart,” O’Leary said. “But this one — I’ve seen much better anti-vaccine propaganda than this, frankly.”
Welcome to the post-scholarship political world—great efficiency by not wasting time on developing strong arguments!
I.e., the proper response to:
Your citations are not supporting your argument …
is
Your mamma (or equivalent in an all-caps Tweet)
(after Idiocracy – the documentary)
—
Proper form for citing unpublished work is to also cite published work – “A shows something (XXX et al., 2025 unpub., XXX et al., 2020, YYY et al., 2020)” to avoid gratuituously red flag waving for reviewers.
“The problem is a lot of legislators and even their staffers, they don’t have the expertise to be able to pick those references apart,” O’Leary said. “But this one — I’ve seen much better anti-vaccine propaganda than this, frankly.”
That caught my eye. Elect stupid people, win stupid prizes?
>up to his old fake science tricks.
The entire field of virology is based on fake science as the high court in Germany in the Lanka case confirmed with a state witness explaining that basic control experiments are not performed you Big Pharma whore.
> Though the preprint was made available a year ago, it has not been published in a peer-reviewed journal.
It would be helpful to have contacted the authors to inquire the publication status. For example, if the status is “submitted and under review” or “submitted and provisionally accepted pending revision”, the delay would IMO not have prejudicial implications that I suspect are intended in this sentence.
Don’t forget AI (ChatFDA?) being used for drug approvals. Bleach injections anyone?
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/10/health/fda-drug-approvals-artificial-intelligence.html