• RFK Jr.'s Autism Controversy: Reshaping U.S. Health Amid Upheaval

  • Apr 30 2025
  • Duración: 3 m
  • Podcast

RFK Jr.'s Autism Controversy: Reshaping U.S. Health Amid Upheaval

  • Resumen

  • Robert F. Kennedy Jr. BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been making headlines this week with controversial statements and public appearances across Texas. On April 29, the Health and Human Services Secretary visited Sawyer Farms in Hillsboro, Texas, alongside Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins to discuss food security and agricultural health. During this visit, Kennedy downplayed the severity of the ongoing measles outbreak, stating that measles deserves less attention than chronic diseases like diabetes and autism.

    At Texas A&M University in College Station, Kennedy claimed that Europe's measles deaths are higher than the U.S.'s "four deaths in 20 years," minimizing the significance of two Texas children dying from measles this year. He remarked, "Every child who gets measles gets a headline. When I was kid, there were 2 million measles cases a year and nobody wrote about them."

    Earlier this month, Kennedy sparked outrage with controversial comments about autism following a CDC report showing autism now affects 1 in 31 eight-year-olds. At an April 16 press conference, Kennedy described autism as something that "destroys families" and claimed many autistic children would "never pay taxes, never hold a job, never play baseball, never write a poem, never go out on a date." Parents and advocates quickly condemned these remarks as spreading misinformation and reinforcing harmful stereotypes.

    Kennedy has ordered the National Institutes of Health to investigate what he called "environmental exposures" potentially contributing to rising autism rates, dismissing the medical consensus that increased diagnoses reflect better awareness and broader diagnostic criteria.

    In his first seven weeks leading HHS, Kennedy has dramatically reshaped the U.S. health apparatus, eliminating entire agency divisions, forcing out top scientists, and seeking greater control over scientific decision-making at agencies like the CDC and FDA. During an April 11 visit to Utah, Kennedy praised state lawmakers for passing legislation banning fluoride from water systems, aligning with his "Make America Healthy Again" initiatives.

    Kennedy's rapid transformation of American healthcare has left the sprawling health department in what employees describe as "an unprecedented state of upheaval," despite President Trump reportedly assuring pharmaceutical executives he would "keep Kennedy under control."

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