
Notorious vaccine skeptic RFK Jr finally urges people to get measles jab after deadly outbreak
Writing in a Fox News op-ed Sunday, the freshly-confirmed Department of Health and Human Service secretary championed the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, touting its efficacy against the deadly virus.
'Measles outbreak is call to action for all of us,' reads the title, with the standfirst stating: ' MMR vaccine is crucial to avoiding potentially deadly disease.' In the article's opening line, RFK Jr stated he is 'deeply concerned about the recent measles outbreak.'
He reflected on the days before the first measles vaccine was licensed for public use in the U.S. in 1963.
'Prior to the introduction of the (MMR) vaccine in the 1960s, virtually every child in the United States contracted measles,' RFK Jr citing that from 1953 to 1962, there were an average of 530,217 confirmed cases and 440 deaths – a one in 1,205 cases fatality rate.
The Kennedy scion said that it is the government's responsibility to ensure that accurate information is relayed about vaccine safety and efficacy, and pledged to 'make vaccines readily accessible for all those who want them.'
He added: 'Vaccines not only protect individual children from measles, but also contribute to community immunity, protecting those who are unable to be vaccinated due to medical reasons.
RFK Jr did, however, emphasize that the decision to vaccinate is 'a personal one.'
According to the latest figures from the Texas Department of Health and Human Services released Friday, 146 measles cases have been identified since late January – a majority of whom appear to be unvaccinated.
An unvaccinated school-age child in Lubbock marked the first death from the highly contagious virus last week and twenty other people have been hospitalized.
After the death Wednesday, the nation's top health official appeared to downplay the situation in Texas and described the outbreak as 'not unusual.'
'There have been four measles outbreaks this year in this country. Last year there were 16. So it's not unusual," he said during Donald Trump's first cabinet meeting. 'We have measles outbreaks every year.'
RFK Jr's latest remarks appear to mark a U-turn from his previous peddling of vaccine skepticism and conspiracy theories, including his promotion of the debunked idea that vaccines cause autism.
Along with his comments about vaccines and autism, the HHS secretary has made other historic inflammatory remarks, including suggesting in January 2022 that Anne Frank was in a better situation when she hid from Nazis than Americans were under Covid-19 mandates.
He also baselessly claimed that Covid-19 was a 'bioweapon' that targets 'Caucasians and Black people' while sparing Ashkenazi Jewish and Chinese people.
Spreading Covid-19 misinformation resulted in Meta deactivating his Instagram account in 2021.
During his Senate confirmation hearings last month, he attempted to clean up his previous remarks and insisted he is not anti-vaccine, but 'pro-safety.'
RFK Jr denied Oregon Senator Ron Wyden's accusations that he 'embraced conspiracy theories, quacks, charlatans, especially when it comes to the safety and efficacy of vaccines,' and noted his own children are vaccinated.
Vaccine hesitancy was already a concern before the Covid-19 pandemic and worsened during the vaccination campaigns, experts told the Washington Post.
According to a survey from the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg Public Policy Center last June, nearly one in four respondents believed that the MMR vaccine caused autism.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said there is no evidence linking the measles vaccine and autism.
In August 2024, the findings from an Annenberg Science and Public Health survey suggested that more than a quarter of Americans believe that Covid-19 vaccines have caused thousands of deaths.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Record
7 hours ago
- Daily Record
First day at school for Lanarkshire youngster who was Scotland's youngest Covid patient
Peyton Maguire was just three weeks old when she was diagnosed with Covid in the early days of the pandemic - but has bounced back and is now heading for Primary One A Lanarkshire youngster who was thought to be Scotland's youngest Covid patient when she was just three weeks old is all set to start school. Five-year-old Peyton Maguire is among the thousands of new starts who will be heading to classrooms across North and South Lanarkshire for the first time on Thursday when she starts in Primary One at Aitkenhead Primary in her home town of Uddingston. She weighed less than four pounds when she was born two months prematurely by section at University Hospital Wishaw in the first week of the Covid lockdown in March 2020, and the tiny newborn then had to spend time in isolation until finally testing negative and being able to go home for the first time the following month. Mum Tracy, now 32, and dad AJ, 34 were shocked when NHS Lanarkshire staff first diagnosed their three-week-old baby with the virus in April 2020 – and her story made headlines around the world in the earliest days of the pandemic, with Tracy now saying: 'The head teacher has joked that they're about to have a celebrity join the school.' Peyton had been delivered early after Tracy was diagnosed with pre-eclampsia, and was being cared for in an incubator in Wishaw's neonatal unit when her parents were told the alarming news that she'd tested positive for Covid-19. Her mum recalled: 'We were told we'd have to stay away from Peyton for 14 days and isolate at home but I pleaded not to be apart from my baby for that long. The staff kindly agreed I could to isolate with her in the hospital while AJ stayed at home. 'Watching the staff at work was incredible. They put their lives at risk to make sure my baby was getting fed and cuddled. Even wearing their PPE, they were determined to hold her. 'I found the same compassion when I had my second daughter, Harley, who's nearly two now. She was also premature and needed extra care. Peyton was able to visit me and Harley in the maternity unit and the staff were very happy to see her again.' Boxing coaches Tracy and AJ are grateful that Peyton's expert care during the traumatic period ensured she has had no long-term health problems, with Tracy adding: 'She's great except for a touch of asthma – it's a real tribute to the staff who looked after her. I was so moved when I found out some of them had to live away from their own children during the pandemic but were caring for my baby.' Peyton bounced back after her weeks of treatment at Wishaw General. The five-year-old loves fashion, gymnastics and drawing and can't wait to begin classes at Aitkenhead Primary, where she is all set with a schoolbag in her favourite colour of pink. Tracy said: 'We've been in so many papers, magazines and TV shows, but the most worthwhile thing her story has led us to do was taking part in a conference for neonatal nurses, where I shared my experience. 'I was also amazed when a woman tapped me on the shoulder in the street and told me she'd read my story and it was the only reason she'd felt confident to go to hospital to have her baby during the pandemic.' 'It's great to hear how she's doing and hard to believe that tiny, vulnerable baby is now a lively five-year-old who's about to go to school.'


The Independent
9 hours ago
- The Independent
A record number of Americans see moderate drinking as harmful, a new Gallup poll shows
Fewer Americans are reporting that they drink alcohol amid a growing belief that even moderate alcohol consumption is a health risk, according to a new Gallup poll released Wednesday. A record high percentage of U.S. adults, 53%, now say moderate drinking is bad for their health, up from 28% in 2015. The uptick in doubt about alcohol's benefits is largely driven by young adults — the age group that is most likely to believe drinking 'one or two drinks a day' can cause health hazards — but older adults are also now increasingly likely to think moderate drinking carries risks. As concerns about health impacts rise, fewer Americans are reporting that they drink. The survey finds that 54% of U.S. adults say they drink alcoholic beverages such as liquor, wine or beer. That's lower than at any other point in the past three decades. The findings of the poll, which was conducted in July, indicate that after years of many believing that moderate drinking was harmless — or even beneficial — worries about alcohol consumption are taking hold. According to Gallup's data, even those who consume alcohol are drinking less. The federal government is updating new dietary guidelines, including those around alcohol. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, government data showed U.S. alcohol consumption was trending up. But other government surveys have shown a decline in certain types of drinking, particularly among teenagers and young adults. This comes alongside a new drumbeat of information about alcohol's risks. While moderate drinking was once thought to have benefits for heart health, health professionals in recent years have pointed to overwhelming evidence that alcohol consumption leads to negative health outcomes and is a leading cause of cancer. Growing skepticism about alcohol's benefits Younger adults have been quicker than older Americans to accept that drinking is harmful, but older adults are coming around to the same view. About two-thirds of 18- to 34-year-olds believe moderate drinking is unhealthy, according to the new poll, up from about 4 in 10 in 2015. Older adults are less likely to see alcohol as harmful — about half of Americans age 55 or older believe this — but that's a substantial increase, too. In 2015, only about 2 in 10 adults age 55 or older thought alcohol was bad for their health. In the past, moderate drinking was thought to have some benefits. That idea came from imperfect studies that largely didn't include younger people and couldn't prove cause and effect. Now the scientific consensus has shifted, and several countries recently lowered their alcohol consumption recommendations. Earlier this year, the outgoing U.S. surgeon general, Vivek Murthy, recommended a label on bottles of beer, wine and liquor that would clearly outline the link between alcohol consumption and cancer. The federal government's current dietary guidelines recommend Americans not drink or, if they do consume alcohol, men should limit themselves to two drinks a day or fewer while women should stick to one or fewer. Gallup's director of U.S. social research, Lydia Saad, said shifting health advice throughout older Americans' lives may be a reason why they have been more gradual than young adults to recognize alcohol as harmful. 'Older folks may be a little more hardened in terms of the whiplash that they get with recommendations,' Saad said. 'It may take them a little longer to absorb or accept the information. Whereas, for young folks, this is the environment that they've grown up in ... in many cases, it would be the first thing young adults would have heard as they were coming into adulthood.' The government is expected to release new guidelines later this year, under the directive of health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has promised big changes. Kennedy has not hinted at how the alcohol recommendations may shift. Drinking rates fall to decade low Slightly more than half of Americans, 54%, report that they drink alcohol — a low in Gallup's data that is especially pronounced among women and young adults. Young Americans' alcohol consumption has been trending downward for years, accelerating the overall decline in alcohol consumption. In sharp contrast with Gallup's findings two decades ago, when young adults were likeliest to report drinking, young adults' drinking rate is now slightly below middle-aged and older adults. Americans' reported drinking is among the lowest since the question was first asked in 1939. For most of the last few decades, at least 6 in 10 Americans have reported drinking alcoholic beverages, only dipping below that point a few times in the question's history. Americans who drink alcohol are consuming less Even if concerns about health risks aren't causing some adults to give up alcohol entirely, these worries could be influencing how often they drink. The survey found that adults who think moderate drinking is bad for one's health are just as likely as people who don't share those concerns to report that they drink, but fewer of the people with health worries had consumed alcohol recently. About half of those who worry moderate drinking is unhealthy said they had a drink in the previous week, compared with about 7 in 10 who did not think drinking was bad for their health. Overall, only about one-quarter of Americans who drink said they had consumed alcohol in the prior 24 hours, a record low in the survey. Roughly 4 in 10 said that it had been more than a week since they had poured a drink. ___


Scottish Sun
9 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Tennis legend Monica Seles, 51, diagnosed with rare muscle-weakening condition as she bravely opens up
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) TENNIS great Monica Seles revealed she has been diagnosed with a rare muscle-weakening condition. Seles, 51, started experiencing double vision and extremely depleted strength in her arms and legs in 2019. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 Monica Seles was diagnosed with a rare neuromuscular autoimmune disease Credit: Getty 2 The tennis star won nine Grand Slams and was the dominant player before her tragic stabbing Credit: AP A long string of tests and scans - delayed by the Covid pandemic - ruled out brain tumours and motor neurone disease. The nine-time Grand Slam champion was eventually diagnosed with myasthenia gravis (MG) in 2022. Now Seles has gone public on neuromuscular autoimmune disease - which currently has no cure - and will raise awareness for the condition with an event around this month's US Open. MG affects most of the body but particularly the muscles that control the eyes - although symptoms can vary from day to day. Approximately 15-20 people per 100,000 - or 0.015 per cent of the population - are affected by MG, which sees the immune system attack the neuromuscular junction where nerves and muscles communicate. Seles told AP: "I would be playing [tennis] with some kids or family members, and I would miss a ball. "I was like, 'Yeah, I see two balls.' "These are obviously symptoms that you can't ignore. "It took me quite some time to really absorb it, speak openly about it, because it's a difficult one. "It affects my day-to-day life quite a lot." BBC presenter taken to hospital after 'real wake up call' working at Wimbledon and putting off medical care Seles won seven of her nine Grand Slams by the age of 18. That included reaching eight Major finals in a row - winning seven - before she was tragically stabbed in April 1993 on court during a match in Hamburg by a fixated fan of Steffi Graf. The Yugoslavia-born star - who switched nationality to USA - returned in 1995 after a two-year absence. She reached the US Open final in her first Major since the stabbing then won the 1996 Australian Open, her ninth and final Grand Slam title. The lefty, who played with a double-handed forehand and backhand, officialy retired in 2008 five years after her final competitive match. Now living in Florida, she told The Athletic about her MG diagnosis: 'I thought, 'OK, just push through it.' "But a couple of instances happened when — on court and in daily life — I realised there was something going on. What is myasthenia gravis? MYASTHENIA GRAVIS is a rare long-term condition that causes muscle weakness. It typically has phases when it improves and phases when it gets worse. MG usually affects most of the body, spreading from the eyes and face to other areas over weeks, months or years. But for some people with myasthenia gravis, only the eyes are affected. It is common for people to have "flare-ups", where symptoms are very troublesome, followed by periods of remission, where symptoms improve. It's an autoimmune condition, which means it's the result of the immune system (the body's natural defence against infection) mistakenly attacking a healthy part of the body. In myasthenia gravis, the immune system damages the communication system between the nerves and muscles, making the muscles weak and easily tired. It can affect people of any age, typically starting in women under 40 and men over 60. Common symptoms of myasthenia gravis include: droopy eyelids double vision difficulty making facial expressions problems chewing and difficulty swallowing slurred speech weak arms, legs or neck shortness of breath and occasionally serious breathing difficulties The symptoms tend to get worse when you're tired. Many people find they're worse towards the end of the day, and better the next morning after getting some sleep. Source: NHS "After coming out of my former country to the IMG Academy, I had to totally reset. "When I became No1, it was a huge reset because everybody treats you differently. "Then obviously when I got stabbed, that was a huge reset. And then when I was diagnosed, it was a huge reset. "The day-to-day part of managing it, depending on my symptoms, is really adjusting, you know. I think anybody else who has Myasthenia Gravis knows it's a continuous adjustment. "After my stabbing, I had to deal with that internally for quite a few years to process it and my MG diagnosis was kind of very similar. "I had to understand my new normal of day-to-day life, what I can do work-wise and different things."