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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Illustration depicting RFK Jr. announcing controversial vaccine policy changes at HHS, clashing with prior senatorial assurances.
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A year into RFK Jr.’s tenure at HHS, major shifts in U.S. vaccine policy clash with assurances he gave senators

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About a year after Robert F. Kennedy Jr. took office as U.S. secretary of health and human services, the CDC has rolled back several universal childhood immunization recommendations, and the administration has moved to claw back pandemic-era public health funds and unwind federal investments in mRNA vaccine development—steps that critics say conflict with Kennedy’s confirmation-hearing assurances on vaccines and vaccine-related funding.

One of the world's leading medical journals, The Lancet, has published a sharp editorial rebuking Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s tenure as U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services after one year. The piece highlights controversial actions that it says have damaged public health efforts. It warns that the effects could take generations to undo.

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Nearly a year after Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced plans for the Administration for a Healthy America, the new agency does not exist. Despite promises to merge existing health departments into AHA to address chronic diseases and addiction, the process remains secretive with no congressional support. Officials describe chaotic planning amid staff cuts at the Department of Health and Human Services.

US President Donald Trump has directed federal agencies to immediately cease using Anthropic's AI technology. The order follows a dispute with the Pentagon, where the company refused unconditional military use of its Claude models. Anthropic has vowed to challenge the Pentagon's ban in court.

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Jay W. Richards, a Heritage Foundation vice president and self-described pro-life conservative, argues in a Daily Wire opinion piece that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. earned conservatives’ backing for Health and Human Services secretary because of his opposition to COVID-era restrictions and his focus on chronic disease in children. Richards also points to several Trump administration actions on abortion-related policy that he says have reassured some pro-life supporters.

The Pentagon has formally notified AI company Anthropic that it is deemed a “supply chain risk,” a rare designation that critics say is typically aimed at adversary-linked technology. The move follows a breakdown in negotiations over whether the U.S. military can use Anthropic’s Claude models for all lawful purposes, versus contractual limits the company says are needed to prevent fully autonomous weapons and mass domestic surveillance.

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At the India AI Impact Summit, Prime Minister Narendra Modi described artificial intelligence as a turning point in human history that could reset the direction of civilisation. He expressed concern over the form of AI to be handed to future generations and emphasised making it human-centric and responsible. Experts have warned about risks including data privacy, deepfakes, and autonomous weapons.

 

 

 

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