Health Care

RFK Jr. may bar government scientists from publishing in medical journals

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr said he will ban government scientists from publishing in leading medical journals and proposed creating an “in-house” publication by the department.

“We are probably going to stop publishing in the Lancet, the New England Journal of Medicine, JAMA and those other journals because they are all corrupt,” Kennedy said during an episode of the “Ultimate Human” podcast.

Kennedy added that publications are “vessels” for pharmaceutical companies.

The three publications Kennedy named have published original, peer-reviewed research since their respective founding in the 1800s. They are all consistently ranked as the top medical journals in the world and are critical in sharing scientific information to millions of people across the globe.

JAMA alone receives more than 30 million visits to their journal’s website a year.

None of the journals immediately responded to requests for comment from The Hill.

Kennedy said that agencies within the HHS will create their own “in-house” journals which will then become the pre-eminent journals in their field.

“They are going to become the pre-eminent journals because if you get NIH funding it is annoiting you as a good, legitimate scientist,” he said.

Kennedy’s comments on the podcast come shortly after he announced the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will stop recommending the COVID-19 vaccine for pregnant women and children. As of Wednesday, the agency has not updated their vaccine schedule to reflect Kennedy’s announcement.

His appearance on the podcast also comes a week after the Trump administration released its MAHA report which contradicted many medical conventions including on vaccines and medications that have long been deemed safe.

In the report, the administration expressed concern over children taking too many medications.

“There is a concerning trend of overprescribing medications to children, often driven by conflicts of interest in medical research, regulation, and practice,” the report reads. “This has led to unnecessary treatments and long-term health risks.”

Kennedy’s comments and the report come as the scientific community grows increasingly worried that the Trump administration will further roll back scientific progress.

Last Friday, Trump ordered federal agencies to overhaul how they handle their scientific research, blaming them for contributing to a loss in trust of science due to their handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and climate change.

Thousands of federal workers have been fired or laid off since Trump’s inauguration in late January and his administration’s sweeping funding cuts have caused the NIH’s funding to fall by $3 billion since late January.

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