News

The Associated Press is out, House Inhabit is in—but only sort of, a Trump administration official tells Vanity Fair.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. addressed health program cuts and the measles vaccine in his first ...
Kennedy Jr.’s team from directly accessing a vaccine database over concerns they would rewrite or erase the stored information. Peter Marks, who headed the Center for Biologics Evaluation and ...
Kennedy’s high-profile Fox News interview at a Florida Steak ‘n Shake — where he lauded the restaurant for its “RFK ... and his team are likely to assert greater political control ...
Kennedy Jr. this week is sowing doubt about the safety ... Kennedy was asked about the rationale behind a recent and controversial decision by political staff at the Food and Drug Administration ...
Kennedy Jr. has expressed another unorthodox view ... Kennedy made the claim in explaining a controversial recent decision by political appointees at the Food and Drug Administration to delay ...
The top vaccine regulator ousted by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said the health secretary’s team has sought nonexistent data to justify antivaccine narratives and pushed to water down regulation of ...
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's team of lead poisoning experts remained ... and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s sweeping cuts to the nation's public health ...
WASHINGTON -- Shortly before he was forced to resign, the nation’s top vaccine regulator says he refused to grant Health ...
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is taking aim at fluoride in public drinking water, a move scientists and dental health organizations have warned would prove disastrous for public health.
Kennedy Jr.’s team unrestricted access to a tightly held vaccine safety database, fearing that the information might be manipulated or even deleted. In an interview with The Associated Press ...