Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has appointed new members to a national committee on autism, his department announced on Jan. 28.
Kennedy said in a statement that he selected the new members of the Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee (IACC) in response to President Donald Trump directing officials to modernize autism research.
The IACC is a federal advisory committee that coordinates federal efforts related to autism, monitors research on autism, and provides advice to the health secretary.
The committee is required to have some members who are not employees of the federal government. At least three need to be people with autism diagnoses. A minimum of three others must be parents or legal guardians of individuals with autism, and at least three others have to represent organizations involved in autism research, advocacy, or service.
“I am honored to be asked to serve on the Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee with so many clinicians, researchers, and advocates with whom I have had the pleasure to work in the past,” Elizabeth Bonker, one of the new members and executive director of the group Communication 4 ALL, told The Epoch Times in an email.
“As a nonspeaker with autism who types to communicate, I will focus on research and services for the millions of nonspeakers whose voices are rarely heard. With expanded access to typed communication, more nonspeakers will have the opportunity to live happy, productive lives.”
Dr. Daniel Rossignol, a doctor who has studied autism biomarkers and treatments and another new member, told The Epoch Times via email he values the committee’s role in promoting autism research.
“As a parent of two children with autism, I also recognize how essential it is that research priorities translate into meaningful improvements in care, services, and long-term outcomes. I look forward to contributing a perspective that bridges evidence, policy, and lived experience,” he said.
Health officials said that the terms of previous members of the committee ended and were not renewed.
At least some of the 21 new members have said that vaccines can cause autism, a disorder that has symptoms ranging from distress over loud noises to an inability to communicate verbally.
A fourth, Honey Rinicella, executive director of the Medical Academy of Pediatrics and Special Needs, has alleged her son’s autism was caused or made worse by vaccination.
Some other groups, such as the American Academy of Pediatrics, say that autism is not caused by vaccines.
Kennedy has said that people who say vaccines do not cause autism are lying, that studies on the matter have not been properly done, and that the Trump administration is conducting those studies.
The committee last met on Jan. 14, according to its website. It has no future meetings scheduled.







