Hundreds of studies on vaccines and their safety fact-check the HHS secretary's false claims.
By Jake Scott / For The Conversation
In the four months since he began serving as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has made many public statements about vaccines that have cast doubt on their safety and on the objectivity of long-standing processes established to evaluate them.
Many of these statements are factually incorrect. For example, in a newscast aired on June 12, Kennedy told Fox News viewers that 97 percent of federal vaccine advisers are on the take. In the same interview, he also claimed that children receive 92 mandatory shots. He has also widely claimed that only covid-19 vaccines, not other vaccines in use by both children and adults, were ever tested against placebos and that nobody has any idea how safe routine immunizations are.
As an infectious disease physician who curates an open database of hundreds of controlled vaccine trials involving over 6 million participants, I am intimately familiar with the decades of research on vaccine safety. I believe it is important to correct the record; especially because these statements come from the official who now oversees the agencies charged with protecting Americans health.
Do children really receive 92 mandatory shots? In 1986, the childhood vaccine schedule contained about 11 doses protecting against seven diseases. Today, it includes roughly 50 injections covering 16 diseases. State school entry laws typically require 30 to 32 shots across 10 to 12 diseases. No state mandates covid-19 vaccination. Where Kennedys 92 mandatory shots figure comes from is unclear, but the actual number is significantly lower.
https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/hundreds-of-studies-on-vaccines-and-their-safety-fact-check-the-hhs-secretarys-false-claims/