Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the new head of the US Department of Health and Human Services, has filled a key autism committee with individuals who are known to promote debunked theories that vaccines cause autism. The Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee (IACC) is tasked with providing guidance on services for people with autism and recommending research funding.
Among those appointed to the IACC are individuals who have been vocal about their skepticism of vaccine safety and have promoted pseudoscientific treatments for autism. For example, Daniel Rossignol, a doctor who has been sued for alleged fraud after prescribing a 7-year-old autistic child a debunked treatment, is now on the committee.
Tracy Slepcevic, an appointee who Kennedy calls a "dear friend," organizes an annual Autism Health Summit that promotes pseudoscientific treatments for autism. Another appointee, Toby Rogers, has claimed that vaccines cause autism and that vaccine makers are "poisoning children." Rogers is also a fellow at the Brownstone Institute for Social and Economic Research.
Ginger Taylor, the former director of the Maine Coalition for Vaccine Choice, has publicly claimed that many autism cases involve "vaccine causation." Elizabeth Mumper, a senior fellow with the Independent Medical Alliance, has written for Children's Health Defense, an organization founded by Kennedy that links autism to vaccines.
The Department of Health and Human Services says claims that members of the panel were selected to advance predetermined conclusions is unfounded and misleading. However, some critics argue that the appointments are an attempt to undermine evidence-based research on autism and promote pseudoscientific treatments.
Autism advocates are worried that this new committee could pave the way for dangerous pseudoscientific treatments going mainstream. "The new IACC is overwhelmingly made up of anti-vaccine advocates and peddlers of dangerous quack autism 'treatments'," said the Autistic Self Advocacy Network in a statement on its website.
Kennedy has already overhauled the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), a normally independent group that advises the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on vaccine usage. The decisions combined could lead to disastrous outcomes, experts say.
Among those appointed to the IACC are individuals who have been vocal about their skepticism of vaccine safety and have promoted pseudoscientific treatments for autism. For example, Daniel Rossignol, a doctor who has been sued for alleged fraud after prescribing a 7-year-old autistic child a debunked treatment, is now on the committee.
Tracy Slepcevic, an appointee who Kennedy calls a "dear friend," organizes an annual Autism Health Summit that promotes pseudoscientific treatments for autism. Another appointee, Toby Rogers, has claimed that vaccines cause autism and that vaccine makers are "poisoning children." Rogers is also a fellow at the Brownstone Institute for Social and Economic Research.
Ginger Taylor, the former director of the Maine Coalition for Vaccine Choice, has publicly claimed that many autism cases involve "vaccine causation." Elizabeth Mumper, a senior fellow with the Independent Medical Alliance, has written for Children's Health Defense, an organization founded by Kennedy that links autism to vaccines.
The Department of Health and Human Services says claims that members of the panel were selected to advance predetermined conclusions is unfounded and misleading. However, some critics argue that the appointments are an attempt to undermine evidence-based research on autism and promote pseudoscientific treatments.
Autism advocates are worried that this new committee could pave the way for dangerous pseudoscientific treatments going mainstream. "The new IACC is overwhelmingly made up of anti-vaccine advocates and peddlers of dangerous quack autism 'treatments'," said the Autistic Self Advocacy Network in a statement on its website.
Kennedy has already overhauled the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), a normally independent group that advises the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on vaccine usage. The decisions combined could lead to disastrous outcomes, experts say.