Jake Scott, MD
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jakescottmd.bsky.social
Jake Scott, MD
@jakescottmd.bsky.social
Infection diseases doctor | Stanford Clinical Associate Professor

Focused on vaccines, data transparency, and antimicrobial stewardship.

Views my own.
Exactly. It uses his legal strategy, his favorite talking points, and even his reinterpretation of a Danish aluminum study he wrote an op-ed attacking.
November 22, 2025 at 3:25 AM
6/ Former CDC Director Mandy Cohen: This "risks endangering children by driving down vaccination rates and leaving kids vulnerable to preventable diseases."
The science hasn't changed since November 19th. It's been captured by RFK Jr, who is following his long-time agenda.
November 21, 2025 at 11:43 PM
5/ The page claims 'studies supporting a link have been ignored by health authorities.'
False. They weren't ignored. They failed scientific scrutiny. The IOM excluded them as 'very seriously flawed.' Wakefield falsified data. Mawson was retracted twice. VAERS lacks controls.
November 21, 2025 at 11:43 PM
4/ The CDC page cherry-picks the Danish aluminum study, highlighting a "67% increased risk" from one subgroup of 51 children while burying that 1.2 million children showed NO increased risk.
The authors called their findings "incompatible with increased risk." The journal rejected retraction demands
November 21, 2025 at 11:43 PM
3/ Kennedy admits to NYT that MMR and thimerosal studies show no link to autism. So he shifts focus to DTaP and hepatitis B, exploiting the fact we haven't studied each vaccine in isolation.
But comprehensive studies of total vaccine exposure, timing, and antigen load all show no autism link.
November 21, 2025 at 11:43 PM
2/ The page now claims "vaccines do not cause autism" violates the Data Quality Act because we haven't proven a negative with absolute certainty.
This is the impossible standard Kennedy has pushed for years. You can't prove water never causes cancer either. Science doesn't work that way.
November 21, 2025 at 11:43 PM