Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump meets with vaccine skeptic

Possible commission alarms health experts

- LAURAN NEERGAARD AND JONATHAN LEMIRE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Washington — Presidente­lect Donald Trump is reviving long debunked attempts to link vaccines to autism, meeting with a vocal skeptic to discuss chairing a commission on vaccinatio­n safety — a move that alarmed child health experts.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. met with Trump at Trump Tower in New York on Tuesday and told reporters that he had agreed to lead the effort, whatever form it takes.

“President-elect Trump has some doubts about the current vaccine policies and he has questions about it,” Kennedy said, adding that “we ought to be debating the science.”

To pediatrici­ans, there’s nothing left to debate.

“Vaccines have been part of the fabric of our society for decades and are the most significan­t medical innovation of our time,” Fernando Stein and Karen Remley of the American Academy of Pediatrics said in a statement Tuesday.

Scientists have ruled out a link between vaccines and autism. But Kennedy, the son of the late U.S. attorney general and senator, has long argued that vaccines containing the preservati­ve thimerosal may cause autism, and has advocated for parents to more easily opt out of childhood vaccinatio­ns.

Trump also has voiced vaccine skepticism, on Twitter and during one of the primary debates when he said that autism has gotten “totally out of control.” In that debate he went on to say: “I am totally in favor of vaccines, but I want smaller doses over a longer period of time.”

Those are views unsupporte­d by scientific evidence and dismissed as conspiracy theory by experts who find their revival alarming. Vaccinatio­n prevents millions of deaths around the world each year. Once common childhood killers can return if support for immunizati­on wanes: During a 2015 measles outbreak, many who fell ill were unvaccinat­ed.

Repeated scientific studies have found no evidence that vaccines in general or those with thimerosal cause autism.

Beyond thimerosal, research has discredite­d concerns that children get too many vaccines at once.

“Delaying vaccines only leaves a child at risk of disease,” Stein and Remley said.

A Trump spokeswoma­n said late Tuesday that while he “enjoyed” his conversati­on with Kennedy, he had not yet commission­ed a panel.

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