
RFK Jr.'s Health Shakeup: Radical CDC Changes, Chronic Illness Blame Game, and Argentine Intrigue
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Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been making waves as Health and Human Services Secretary with several major announcements and appearances in recent days.
On May 27, Kennedy announced that the CDC will no longer recommend COVID-19 vaccines for healthy children and pregnant women, marking a significant policy shift in public health guidelines under his leadership.
Just a day earlier, on May 26, during an appearance on the "Ultimate Human Podcast with Gary Brecka," Kennedy called prestigious medical journals like The Lancet, New England Journal of Medicine, and JAMA "corrupt" and suggested that government scientists may soon be prohibited from publishing in these journals. Instead, he proposed that the NIH might establish its own in-house medical journals unless current publications change "radically."
On May 23, the White House released Kennedy's Make America Healthy Again Commission report on chronic disease in America. The 69-page document blames chronic illnesses on ultra-processed foods, chemicals in the environment, sedentary behavior, and over-reliance on digital devices among children. Kennedy called it "the most radical consensus by a government agency in history about the state of America's health." The report also controversially suggested that childhood vaccines need further study.
Politico reported that Kennedy's report surprisingly targeted doctors, accusing them of being influenced by the pharmaceutical industry to overprescribe medications and failing to treat root causes of disease.
On May 24, HHS announced that Kennedy would travel to Buenos Aires, Argentina, for a two-day trip beginning May 25, though details about the purpose of this international visit were limited.
Earlier this month, on May 8, Georgia Senators Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff sent Kennedy a letter requesting a meeting to address "urgent concerns" about his management of the CDC, including what they called "unjust firing of thousands of CDC workers in Georgia."
All this follows Kennedy's controversial transition from presidential candidate to Trump's Health Secretary, with his unconventional views on public health continuing to generate significant attention and concern among medical professionals and lawmakers alike.
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