
The National Institutes of Health is amassing private medical records from a number of federal and commercial databases to give to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s new effort to study autism, the NIH’s top official said Monday.


RFK Jr.’s registry has been widely criticized as intrusive and stigmatizing. Advocates and experts denounce the massive collection of private data without sufficient safeguards, fearing targeted surveillance of autistic people and political or ideological instrumentalization of this sensitive information.

At a recent press conference as U.S. Secretary of Health, RFK Jr. stirred up controversy by declaring that autism “destroys families” and calling it a “preventable disease”.

RFK Jr. went on to claim that autistic children, in his words: “will never pay taxes, will never write a poem, will never play baseball” and that “many of them will never go on a date”.