HHS develops AI tool for vaccine injury hypotheses

The US Department of Health and Human Services is creating a generative AI tool to analyze vaccine injury claims. The tool aims to identify patterns in a national monitoring database and generate hypotheses on vaccine side effects. Experts express concerns about its potential use under Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s leadership.

The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has announced the development of a generative artificial intelligence tool focused on vaccine-related data. According to an inventory released last week detailing all AI use cases for the agency in 2025, the tool will examine reports submitted to a national vaccine monitoring database. Its primary functions include detecting patterns in the data and producing hypotheses regarding the negative effects of vaccines.

This initiative comes amid broader discussions on AI applications in public health. The inventory, which outlines HHS's planned AI deployments for the upcoming year, highlights this tool as part of efforts to enhance data analysis in vaccine safety monitoring. However, the project has raised alarms among experts, who worry that under the influence of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., recently associated with the department, the AI could be directed to support anti-vaccine perspectives. Kennedy has long been a vocal critic of vaccines, and critics fear the tool might amplify unsubstantiated claims about vaccine injuries.

The development reflects growing integration of AI in government health operations, but it also underscores tensions between technological innovation and public trust in vaccination programs. As of the inventory's release, no specific timeline for the tool's deployment has been detailed beyond the 2025 framework. Public health advocates emphasize the need for rigorous oversight to ensure the AI's outputs remain evidence-based and do not contribute to misinformation.

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