Gabrielle M. Etzel is the healthcare policy reporter for the Washington Examiner. Prior to joining the Washington Examiner, she served as a staff reporter at Campus Reform and as a freelance writer.
EXCLUSIVE — Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said he aims to overhaul the National Institutes of Health unilaterally to address the high prevalence of chronic disease, criticizing his opponents in the 2024 presidential campaign as maintaining a status quo that benefits pharmaceutical companies.
Kennedy cited data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that one in every 36 children could be diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder as of 2020, while it was only one in 150 in 2000. Kennedy also pointed to data from the Environmental Protection Agency finding increases in neurodevelopmental conditions, such as autism, learning disabilities, attention disorders, and intellectual disabilities, since the 1990s.
The son of the late Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of President John F. Kennedy gained notoriety as well as a stronger political following during the coronavirus pandemic for criticizing mRNA vaccines, vaccine mandates, and the speed with which COVID-19 vaccines entered the market. His comments about vaccines led to bans from several social media platforms and condemnation from family members.
"Unfortunately, we have public health agencies that are unwilling to look at the etiology of these chronic diseases," Kennedy said."We need better science ... to identify the culprit, and we need to eliminate the exposure."
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