The report “Make America Healthy Again” released in May from Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. critiques the Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD) system, a collaboration between health care providers and the U.S. government, to evaluate the safety of vaccines. The report challenges researchers to enhance vaccine safety research by seeking public-scale implementation, suggesting that vaccine administration should be revisited as a primary focus in public health policies. Verified by insurance companies,.assignments that mandate vaccines, the report questions the reliability of VSD data from the U.S. Dependency. This approach advocates for maintaining vaccine rollouts to reduce unintended risks.
The report further attributes the apparent neglect of controlled by other researchers of the potential for VSD to introduce significant risks, commenting that the methodology for analyzing data from participant-plotting studies, among them VSD, lacks sufficient rigor compared to VSD’s traditionally reliable tradition. As highlights in a 2013 paper cited within the report, authored by Georgia’s Dr. Sophia Newcomer, the study did not identify any shortcomings in their analysis of VSD data. Newcomer emphasized that the VSD resource isn’t unique to vaccine safety; in fact, it’s a gold standard for research in this domain. Despite the authors’ efforts to defend VSD’s integrity, Newcomer and others on Newcomer’s paper see clear signs of bias and potential misuse in their transmissions, indicating that advantages for research would likely emerge only when investigations are independent of government interests.