Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Secretary of Health of the Nation, on Saturday instructed the leaders of the Non -Profit organization he founded to remove the website that imitated the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention project, but presented the case that vaccines cause autism.
The site was published on the website apparently registered on the non-profit organization, the anti-part-time group for children’s health defense. Mr. Kennedy’s action took place after the Recent York Times asked about the site and after the news of her rikoshatek in social media.
The site was removed on Saturday evening offline.
“Secretary Kennedy instructed the office of legal advisor to send a formal demand for defense of children’s health to remove their website,” said the health department and human services in a statement.
“At HHS, we are devoted to the restoration of our agencies to their tradition of maintaining gold, based on science evidence,” he experienced.
It was unclear why the vaccination group could publish a cdc imitation page. The organization did not respond to requests for comment, and Mr. Kennedy said that he broke up her bonds when he started the presidential campaign in 2023.
The false vaccine safety side was practically indistinguishable from the one available on its own CDC. The layout, cuts of the magazines and the logo were the same, perhaps in violation of the federal copyright.
While the CDC website rejects the relationship between vaccines and autism, the fraudster has left the possibility that it exists. At the bottom it contained links to video references from parents who believe that their children were hurt by vaccines.
The website’s publication was first Reported to Suback by E. Rosalie LiFounder of the information Epidemiology Laboratory. The non -profit organization did not immediately answer to the request for comment.
Mr. Kennedy for years maintained that there was a relationship between vaccines and autism. He kept this position during interrogations confirming the Senate, despite the extensive research refuting theory.
Under his direction, CDC recently announced plans for re-examining evidence-move, which Senator Bill Cassida, a Republican from Louisiana and chairman of the Senate Health Committee, was a loss of money.
The mighty online website contained a well-known blue CDC banner at the top and the blue-white agency logo along with the words “vaccine safety”. The headline is “vaccines and autism”.
The text was determined by studies both supporting and refuting the relationship between vaccines and autism, but left an open opportunity – long ago rejected by scientists – that the arrows were harmful.
This included a quote for the study of Brian S. Hooker, who is the main scientific officer in defense of children’s health and other critical research on vaccination.
“This is a mix of things that are legally reviewed and things that are false,” said Dr. Bruce Gellin, who directed the HHS vaccine program in Bush and Obama administrations.
“Footnotes make this justified scientific work,” he added.
A series of references at the bottom of the page contained films with titles such as “Mother of 3: I Will Never Will Again” and “We signed his life.”
This is a clear contrast with the CDC official A site about autism and vaccineswhich is largely devoted to the overthrow of the idea of the connection and clearly states that “studies have shown that there is no link.”
Recently, the defense of children’s health has been the explosion of the Odra explosion in West Texas.
The organization CHD.TV published an interview on a camera with parents of a 6-year-old girl who was recognized as a dead Oder by the Health Department, the first reported death of the Oder in the United States for a decade.
The child was not fractured and did not have the underlying diseases, According to the Health Agency. But the defense of children’s health claimed that she had obtained hospital files that were contrary to the cause of death.
The organization also interviewed Dr. Ben Edwards, who treated the girl’s siblings and is one of two doctors from Texas – both practicing alternative medicine – whom Mr. Kennedy spoke about the outbreak of the explosion.
In response to the video, the Covenant Children’s Hospital in Lubbock in Texas published this week a statement that “recent online video circulating contains misleading and incorrect claims” and noting that the regulations regarding confidentiality prevent the hospital from providing information specially related to the case.