They Were Offered Anonymized Data and Turned It Down
That’s the part nobody can explain.
I’ve been sitting with this all day. I keep coming back to one question. I’ll get to it.
What HHS Is Actually Doing
First, here’s what reporters confirmed.
RFK Jr. and the Department of Health and Human Services are pursuing access to most Americans’ medical records. Not summaries. Identifiable records. Doctors’ notes. Prescription history. KFF Health News and CNN reported it on June 4, 2026.
The stated reason is to study a link between vaccines and autism. A link scientists studied for decades and rejected.
Let me be clear about how this works, because people keep getting it wrong.
This isn’t the government politely asking your pediatrician for files. They’re going state by state, after the health information exchanges — the systems hospitals and clinics use to share detailed, identifiable patient records behind the scenes. Doctors’ notes. Prescription histories. The kind of detail you’d never expect to leave your doctor’s office.
According to the reporting, a group of these state exchanges pitched the federal government on a new surveillance system that would deliver real-time data feeds on chronic disease trends. Under that proposal, HHS would get data drawn from 90 percent of the population’s medical records by 2028. One slide noted the data would be “deidentified where appropriate.” Read that phrase again. Where appropriate. Someone gets to decide when your name stays attached.
Most state leaders pushed back. Maryland declined. Indiana said it was still weighing it. But at least one state didn’t wait. Nebraska’s exchange moved to share data, and shortly after, Nebraska’s health department landed the largest CDC grant of any state last year. I’m not going to tell you those two facts are connected. I’m just going to put them next to each other and let you sit with them.
The Data They Need Already Exists
Here’s the part I can’t get past.
Researchers already have anonymized data. They use it all the time. You can argue about whether people consented to that, and that’s a fair conversation to have. But anonymized data answers the population question. Do vaccinated kids have autism at higher rates? You don’t need a single name to answer that. The research already exists.
They were pointed to that data. A former CDC official tried to steer them to it.
They weren’t interested. They went after the records with names attached instead.
Here’s why that distinction matters, in plain terms. To answer the question they claim to be asking — do vaccinated kids develop autism at higher rates than unvaccinated kids — you compare two large groups and look at the rates. You need the numbers. You do not need to know which child is which. That’s the whole point of deidentified data: it strips out the names and identifiers and keeps the patterns. Researchers have studied this exact question this exact way, across millions of children, for years. The answer keeps coming back the same.
A former CDC official with three decades of experience said the solution was simple. Work with researchers, use the huge deidentified databases that already exist, and study whatever you want to study. He pointed them straight to it. By the reporting, the secretary didn’t seem interested. Instead, advisers were sent to download millions of identifiable records directly.
So the tool that answers the stated question was offered, for free, with no privacy cost. And it was passed over in favor of the one thing that question doesn’t require: your child’s name.
So Why Do They Want the Names?
This is the only question I’m going to keep asking until someone answers it.
I can speculate. I won’t. I don’t need to, and neither do you. The question stands on its own. If the goal is to study a population, the anonymized data does that. Wanting names means the question isn’t really about a population, or they don’t trust the answer science already gave them. Neither of those should make you feel safe.
I’m not going to tell you what they plan to do with your child’s name. I don’t know. That’s the point. They won’t say.
What This Is Already Costing Families
Parents reach out to me who waited three years for an evaluation. Three years on a list. And they’re canceling the appointment at the last minute. Not because they stopped worrying about their kid. Because they’re scared their child will end up in a database they can’t see and can’t escape.
Think about that.
We’ve reached a moment where a parent has to choose between getting their child help and protecting their child from their own government.
And the cruelty of it is that the choice itself does damage. Early intervention is one of the most well-supported things we have. The earlier a kid gets support, the better the outcomes tend to be. Every appointment a frightened parent cancels is a window closing a little. The fear doesn’t just sit in someone’s chest. It shows up in a kid who waited and didn’t get seen.
This is what a chilling effect actually looks like in real life. It isn’t dramatic. It’s a parent quietly deciding not to mention something to the pediatrician. It’s skipping the evaluation. It’s a family that stops trusting the one system that was supposed to help them, because they can’t shake the feeling that anything written down might be used against their child later. Trust like that takes years to build and minutes to break.
That is not okay. That will never be okay.
And I’m tired of hearing it won’t happen. I’ve been saying this was coming for a while, and the answer was always the same. “You’re overreacting. It won’t happen.”
It’s happening. Today. In the reporting. With dollar figures and timelines attached.
I’m also tired of watching people bend themselves into knots to defend it. If you’re defending this, then answer the question. Why do they need our kids’ names? If you can’t, stop defending it and start asking too.
What You Can Do Today
Call your governor.
Call your state health department.
Call your state representatives.
Tell them your medical records, and your child’s medical records, are not to be handed to HHS. Be specific. Be polite. Be relentless.
If you don’t know what to say, here’s a script you can read word for word:
“Hi, my name is ___ and I’m a constituent in ___. I’m calling because I do not consent to my family’s medical records being shared with HHS through our state health information exchange. I’m asking you to oppose any agreement that gives the federal government access to identifiable patient data. Can you tell me where my representative stands on this?”
That’s it. Sixty seconds. You don’t have to be an expert. You don’t have to win a debate. You just have to be one more name on the list of people who called and said no.
A few things that make the calls land harder. Call the local district office, not just D.C. — the lines are shorter and the staff actually log what constituents say. Give them your zip code so they know you vote where it counts. Ask for a written response; it forces a position on the record. And if you get a voicemail, leave the message anyway. They count those too.
One call matters more than a hundred angry posts. Posts vanish. A logged constituent call sits in a file a staffer reads to the boss.
Pay attention to who is allowing this. Register to vote if you haven’t. Then vote like your family’s privacy depends on it, because right now it does.
A Registry by Any Other Name
Our kids are not a fishing expedition. They are not political pawns. A registry by any other name is still a registry.
And your family’s private records are not theirs to take.
Sources
KFF Health News and CNN. “RFK Jr. Seeks To Peek at Americans’ Medical Records for Clues on Autism and Vaccines.” By Amanda Seitz and Darius Tahir. June 4, 2026.
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