The New York Post editorial board challenged Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to publicly back vaccines amid a measles outbreak in Texas.
After voting to confirm Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as health secretary, Senator Bill Cassidy, a doctor and Republican of Louisiana, is embracing the “gestalt” of Kennedy’s measles response.
Amid the ongoing measles outbreak in Texas, Fox News senior medical analyst Dr. Marc Siegel sat down with HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in an exclusive interview to discuss contagion concerns.
Amid the Texas Measles outbreak, vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy, newly confirmed as the nation’s Health and Human Services secretary, voiced halfhearted support for the measles vaccine. Don’t
Amid the Texas Measles outbreak, vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy, newly confirmed as the nation’s Health and Human Services secretary, voiced halfhearted support for the measles vaccine. Don’t
In an interview, the H.H.S. secretary claimed that unconventional treatments were helping patients but described vaccination as a personal choice.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., tells readers what his agency is doing and what they can do to stop the measles outbreak that has claimed a child's life in Texas.
Kennedy has touted the benefits of an unconventional measles treatment including the steroid budesonide, the antibiotic clarithromycin and cod liver oil, which has high concentrations of vitamin A.
US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. wrote in an op-ed that vitamin A could help against measles. Doctors explain why it's no substitute for vaccines.
Known for his anti-vaccination stance, the new US Secretary of Health is facing his first challenge: Curbing the mainly Texas-based measles epidemic which has been encouraged by low vaccination coverage.