Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
After Uproar Over Autism Comments, RFK Jr. Backpedals, Blames Media
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is in full damage-control mode after causing outrage with his comments about autism during his first official press briefing as health secretary. Kennedy鈥檚 remarks have caused national outrage, with Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) calling for Kennedy鈥檚 resignation. Kennedy, a longtime vaccine skeptic, attempted to dial back the controversy in a sit-down Thursday night with Fox News鈥 Sean Hannity. Kennedy attempted to clarify that he wasn鈥檛 referring to all people with diagnosed with autism, but only to those who are 鈥渘onverbal鈥, meaning that they do not communicate using spoken language. 鈥淟et me say this,鈥 he told Hannity. 鈥淭here are many kids with autism who are doing well. They鈥檙e holding down jobs, they鈥檙e getting pay checks, they鈥檙e living independently. But I was referring specifically to that 25 percent鈥攖he group that is nonverbal.鈥 (Van Brugen, 4/18)
Rep. Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.) criticized Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for comments he made Wednesday about autism. ... 鈥淭his is disrespectful and a flat out lie that further stigmatizes autism. It鈥檚 not a virus or a disease 鈥 it鈥檚 a neurological condition with a wide spectrum. Many Americans with autism work, pay taxes, and are living happy and healthy lives,鈥 Frost said in his post. (Suter, 4/17)
Autistic people and their loved ones have swiftly and publicly rejected statements by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the nation鈥檚 top health official, that people with autism will never play baseball, date, pay taxes or have a job. They say the health and human services secretary鈥檚 comments Wednesday, during his first official news conference, misstate the capabilities of many people with autism 鈥 and they flooded social media with counterexamples. (Somasundaram, 4/17)
麻豆女优 Health News: 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 鈥榃hat The Health?鈥: On Autism, It鈥檚 The Secretary鈥檚 Word Vs. CDC鈥檚
Tensions between Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his employees at the Department of Health and Human Services are mounting, as he made a series of claims about autism this week 鈥 contradicting his agency鈥檚 findings. Plus, President Donald Trump unveiled an executive order to lower drug prices as his administration explores tariffs that could raise them. (Rovner, 4/17)
Also 鈥
At the fitness club where Michele Jardine used to work as a cleaner, her boss called her 鈥渞etarded鈥 in front of her co-workers. Jardine has an intellectual disability, which can make it harder to learn and understand instructions, and borderline personality disorder, which can lead to outbursts. She says repeated bullying at work led her to move to the Brookwood Community in Brookshire, Texas, a nonprofit whose goal is to 鈥渃hange the way the world thinks about adults with disabilities.鈥 ... Brookwood is exempt from paying her the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour because of her disability. (Eidelson, 4/17)