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RFK Jr.'s views on health and vaccines prompt alarm from CT lawmakers

FILE: Patricia Srenaski of HealthCare prepares a COVID-19 vaccine before administering it to to first responders from across the state on January 13, 2021.
Ryan Caron King
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FILE: Patricia Srenaski prepares a COVID-19 vaccine before administering it to to first responders at the ϳԹ Convention Center on January 13, 2021.

President-elect Donald Trump said in the weeks leading up to the election that he would allow vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to “.”

While Kennedy’s role in Trump’s new administration remains unclear, the environmental lawyer’s many controversial statements are rallying state lawmakers to pay close attention to ϳԹ’s public health messaging, which they said must lean into years of rigorous science.

“There is an imminent threat to the health and well-being of our citizens from what is being said,” said Dr. Saud Anwar, state senator and chair of the Public Health Committee.

In recent weeks, Kennedy has issued statements attacking the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). He said the agency was waging a “war on public health.”

Kennedy has also said that upon Trump taking office he would push for a recommendation against adding fluoride in local water systems.

“We don't need fluoride in our water, and it's a very bad way to deliver it because it's delivered … through the blood system,” .

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has called community water fluoridation “,” and bases its fluoride on years of peer-reviewed research.

“RFK is tweeting about getting rid of fluoride in water, that's disastrous,” said Cristin McCarthy Vahey, a Democratic state representative.

Fluoridation became a law in on May 18, 1965, and as of April 2015, the Health and Human Services’ optimal fluoride level is at 0.7 mg/L.

Children are at risk for tooth decay if their water supply has limited or no fluoride in it, .

Countering misinformation on vaccines and public health

Kennedy heads the Trump-aligned (MAHA) movement that promotes ideas health experts – including Anwar, a pulmonologist – say fly in the face of science.

“For a person who has been very clear about where his policies are, this is going to be a public health crisis if those policies are implemented,” Anwar said. “The public health protections that are in every state are now going to be endangered.”

One area of concern? Vaccines, which have been a repeated target of Kennedy, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In 2021, Kennedy claimed that the COVID-19 vaccine was the “.”

But the benefits of vaccines – including COVID-19 vaccinations – outweigh their risks, . Global immunization efforts have saved at least 154 million lives over the past 50 years, .

State lawmakers say they are also concerned that funding for public health could dry up under the incoming Trump administration. ϳԹ recently from the CDC for public health.

“What kind of funding cuts are we going to see that prevent us from continuing to get the message out about what is science?” Vahey asked.

Anwar said he is in talks with public health experts in the state to promote what he said is “science, data [and] evidence.”

But public health messaging also needs to go beyond that, he said.

“But we also look … at how we are communicating that information, how we're building trust, how we're building relationships,” Anwar said. “And how we have trusted messengers in the community who can make sure that our citizens are receiving information in a way that they can believe.”

Sujata Srinivasan is ϳԹ Radio’s senior health reporter. Prior to that, she was a senior producer for Where We Live, a newsroom editor, and from 2010-2014, a business reporter for the station.

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ϳԹ’s journalism is made possible, in part by funding from Jeffrey Hoffman and Robert Jaeger.