Bulwark Takes - Dr. Mike’s Fight to Save Medicine from RFK Jr.
Episode Date: August 4, 2025Dr. Mike (Mikhail Varshavski), a family medicine physician and viral YouTube creator, joins Jonathan Cohn to unpack the chaotic healthcare landscape of the last few years. Dr. Mike shares how he built... a 14-million-strong audience by countering medical misinformation. They look into the pandemic’s communication failures, the politicization of public health, vaccine skepticism, and why the CDC struggled to keep up with TikTok and YouTube. You can check out Dr. Mike at his channel here: @DoctorMike Go to https://quince.com/BULWARKTAKES for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns!
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Hey everybody, it's Jonathan Cohn here at the Bullwork.
Very exciting show today.
We are gonna be talking about medicine,
public health, vaccines, the Trump administration,
the Biden administration, what it's like to be the sexiest doctor alive, which is actually
not something I know about.
But my guest does, because he was once named that.
We are here with Mikhail Varshavsky.
If you don't know who that is, ask one of the 14 million people
who follow him on YouTube and know him as Dr. Mike.
He has got a huge audience and makes a lot of sense
talking about healthcare and medicine.
So really glad to have him here before we start.
If you are new to the Bulwark, please check us out online,
check out our YouTube channel, check out our newsletters,
subscribe, like us, we really appreciate it.
Dr. Mike, excited to have you here visiting at the Bulwark.
Thank you so much, Jonathan.
I'm excited to talk about all the subjects you just brought
up, because I feel like there's a lot of inaccuracies,
controversies, misinformation tidbits swirling around,
and hopefully we can put them to bed today.
Yeah, now there's a lot.
And you do have an audience.
I will say, full disclosure, I'm a journalist.
I work in health policy, I spend a decent
amount of time writing about public health.
I was familiar with you, but only a little bit.
I mentioned to my kids, I was interviewing Dr. Mike and they were like, whoa, that's
so cool that I never get that.
So thank you for that.
But that's awesome that your kids are watching health content online for all the variety
that's out there. The fact that they're online for all the variety that's out there.
The fact that they're focusing on health is exciting to me.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, I think that's as far we're going to talk about today, right?
Because this is how people are getting so much information right now.
And I feel like as someone, again, I'm kind of an old guy, but as someone, I pay a lot
of attention to sort of well-known, a lot of the well-known spokespeople from medicine
who go on TV. And I am used to being influential, but they're just not, a lot of the well-known spokespeople from medicine who go on TV and
I am used to being influential, but they're just not reaching a lot of people. And younger people especially are getting information for YouTube, are getting it through social media, and we need
smart, well-informed voices there getting the message out. So that brings me to you. First of
all, just how did you, can we do a little origin story here? I mean, how did you even get to be a doctor?
Well, my origin story starts probably when I was six years old. I immigrated to the United
States with my family from Russia under refugee status, being Jews. And my father was a physician
back in Russia, had to go through medical school residency for the second time, difficult in a new language,
especially in your 40s while raising me and my sister.
So I got to witness the entire medical school journey
as a nine, 10 year old, which is fairly unusual.
Most kids are younger when their parents
are in that level of education.
And I fell in love with the field.
I said, this is exactly what I wanna do.
Not only am I passionate about it, but it fit my skillset.
I got the best grades in my science classes.
And I said, that's where, that's where I want to put my focus.
In fact, right out of high school, I was fortunate enough to be accepted into a seven year combined
program where you get your bachelor's and your doctorate in seven years.
So you shorten by a year, one year less tuition, one year earlier to become
a doctor.
Actually, in a funny way, my first year of actual medical school, I couldn't attend the
welcome party because it was at a bar and I wasn't yet 21 years old.
I was the sole student not allowed to attend the party, but I graduated age 24.
I was young.
I was excited, started my family medicine residency at Atlantic
Health and I said, I'm going to be the best family medicine doctor I could be. But I didn't know life
was about to change in a year. My social media platforms went viral where I was just sharing my
day to day of being a med student and then a medical resident. I had to make a choice. There
was a crossroads. Do I lean into this superficial, sexy doctor thing that folks were writing about,
or do I completely ignore it and go on with my training?
I realized there was actually a third path.
And the third path was to lean in,
go on all these media shows, the talk shows, daytime,
and allow them to bring up the sexy doctor title,
but then pivot the conversation
to something about primary care,
about the importance
of making lifestyle changes, highlighting the misinformation that my patients were falling
victim to. And it worked for a short period of time, but then the reality of 15 minutes
of fame set in, all the gatekeepers of these talk shows, news programs got bored and no
longer booked me for the programs. So I said, perfect. Let's take all this information and bring it to YouTube where there are no gatekeepers.
We can be in charge of the information.
We could tell the truth.
And I thought that would be the game changer.
Everyone would fall in love with the transparency, the truth, and they didn't.
For the first year, there was a big challenge.
Our partner who helped us launch the channel actually fired us and said we were a failure, but we pushed on. We said, we're going to continue to do better. We're
going to study the analytics. We're going to learn what people enjoy watching, but never
give up the medical ethics of the program. And a few short months after we were fired,
the channel exploded. And over the last seven, eight years has been continually growing to now, as you said, 14
million subscribers, about 100 million views per month on the channel with educational
topics at the forefront, beating up misinformation no matter what side of the political spectrum
it comes from.
And I think people have really bought into the fact that they're going to get unbiased,
accurate information as best as I can deliver it.
Yeah. Yeah. Well, first of all, I bet those producers and sponsors who decided to cut you
off, they're probably regretting that. And I just, I want to pause that. Obviously we're here to
talk healthcare and not immigration, but I should say that story you told about your dad, first of
all, rings true. My grandfather came here from Germany in the 19th,
German Jew came in 1930s, got out just in time.
Same story, was a physician, had to start all over again.
I still remember now I was not alive then,
but hearing stories that he was an orderly actually.
He was a board certified urologist working as an orderly in Illinois,
taking his medical boards and just amazing.
Then went on to a career being a family practitioner in Brooklyn,
and not too far from where you are.
And such a parable though about how many immigrants come here and the hard work they do and American success story.
Well, that's the fear of what's going on now.
Are we having an unwinding of that?
And actually the cycle rotating in the opposite direction where folks are leaving the United States for fear of loss of grants,
NIH cuts, etc. But I'm sure we're going to get into that.
Yeah, well, I mean, let's pause that for one second because I mean, you're in the New York area,
you're in the healthcare sector, and we'll go back to the other topics in a minute.
But I mean, the immigrant workforce in healthcare, I mean, it's like a backbone.
I mean, can you imagine, you tell me because you're there every day, but I mean but it seems to me, at least, I'm not in New York,
I'm based in Michigan, but you go in the health care sector,
especially when you get down to the long-term care workers.
We depend on that immigrant workforce to staff,
and we have staffing shortage as it is.
I assume that's the case where you are.
Yeah, we have staffing shortages
across the board in health care.
We have lack of residency training spots in healthcare.
We have issues in creating incentives for young people
to get excited about certain industries and fields.
For me as a family medicine doctor,
that's kind of on the lower part of the healthcare totem pole
in terms of student interest.
They wanna go into the higher paying, fancier specialties. And as
a result, the backbone of our healthcare system, which is primary care, is not getting the
attention it deserves. And there's a lot of issues of why that needs to be fixed. But
the first part of it is we don't have the spots to train the necessary primary care
physicians. And I feel like that's the unnoticed section of all of this.
When you kind of took off, I mean,
and I remember this first time you sort of popped on my radar
screen, it was during COVID.
I mean, that's when you started to,
you kind of were getting some exposure as sort of as a truth
teller during COVID.
First of all, you were, were you out of medical school then
already, or were you?
Yeah, I was out of medical school.
I was probably three years or so into being
in attending at that point. And you were in New Jersey at that time? Correct. Yep. So I mean, you were like, I mean probably three years or so into being in attending at that point.
And you were in New Jersey at that time?
Correct. Yep.
So, I mean, you were like, I mean, you'll forget. I mean, I thought the whole COVID
experience is in memory hold in some ways, but I mean, New Jersey and New York got slammed.
I just sort of curious, what do you remember about those first early weeks and months?
I mean, what was it like?
There was a lot of fear. Ironically, when the pandemic first started,
we, or at least the conversations of what the pandemic would become first started,
we reluctantly waited to make content about COVID-19. I remember there were some case
reports coming out in late December, early January, where people were requesting that we would cover
this new illness, at which point it was called something different,
but we said, we're going to wait, let's see what happens.
Let's get more information so that we're not just making a speculative video.
And I think our first video on the topic came out in late January,
at which point we were still figuring things out.
And there was a mantra that was born about at that time from our channel called
stay alert, not anxious.
Because I saw even for myself how easy it is to become anxious given the fact that we
have this new virus.
It's spreading so rapidly.
There's information that's spreading rapidly that could be true or untrue.
Everyone was confused.
Hospital systems were confused.
Where should budgets go?
How should we manage these patients?
There was a lot of criticism about how we handled COVID-19
when it came to ventilator use.
But that's now looking back
with all the information we have now.
Back then, we saw patients with low oxygen rates,
and what we did prior to our knowledge
that we have now of COVID-19
was to put them on a ventilator.
Then we realized perhaps we're being too aggressive and we had to taper that back.
But we could only learn that as time went on.
So we saw our emergency rooms get overwhelmed, our inpatient rooms get overwhelmed.
Elective care that was quite important, cancer screenings, surgeries needed to be rescheduled. It was
difficult to get care for certain individuals who were having heart attacks because there
was so much pressure on the emergency 911 dispatch system. Even within my hospital,
we had to dedicate a new ward specifically for patients with lung issues, mostly related
to COVID-19. And that was a brutal first wave for us.
There was so much we didn't know.
There was so much worry about decimation
of our healthcare system.
The fact that we couldn't even deliver basic medical care
and we had to triage care.
Who should we see?
Who should we not see?
Who can we actually help as opposed to hurt
with our medical care?
And it was a very, very scary time
that we've forgotten about a bit and now only look
at what we've done wrong in the years afterwards.
But we need to remember how scary the condition was early
on in the days of 2020.
Yeah, I'm glad you meant that.
Again, I'm based in Michigan, so Detroit
got hit just a little bit.
We were like the second wave of cities.
And it was brutal.
I mean, every day there were stories in the news
about prominent people who were dying.
And of course, they were just one piece of much larger waves
and the hospitals were completely overwhelmed.
But it was also, I mean, there is,
I do feel like that was like this inflection point
in the relationship between the sort of public and the medical establishment and
the public health establishment we sort of see this trust gap opening up and
I'm straight curious because I mean this is this is what you do now looking back
the public health officials when they get a lot of they get a lot of you know
a lot of people I mean you know you have that you have the haters right and you
have people want to like string up Dr. Fauci or lock
them away or whatever it is they want to do to them.
A lot of people just don't trust me.
They've lost a lot of faith.
And I'm curious, what is your, if you
had to go back and grade the public health response
and the communications response during COVID, assess it.
How well did they do?
What did they do wrong?
What could we get better next time?
I think they did a great job given the circumstances
and given the fact that they were coming
into the pandemic underprepared,
not from a pandemic preparedness standpoint,
not from a scientific standpoint,
but from a communication standpoint.
Even three years prior to the pandemic,
I wrote an article for the American Academy
family physicians website, where I explained that the lack of evidence-based, accurate
communicators on social media was creating a gray zone.
And in the gray zone is where grifters flourish.
I actually did a TED Talk at the time and I called them IKA experts.
I know all experts.
They do a phenomenal job whenever there's a gray zone,
where modern science doesn't yet have all the data
or all the knowledge, they throw in theories
with a massive amount of confidence,
and therefore they're able to sway public opinion,
confuse individuals, and therefore lead
to bad health outcomes.
So I saw that gap was forming,
and as basically
was predicted by that article three years later,
we weren't ready from a CDC standpoint,
from a government standpoint, from a Dr. Fauci standpoint,
to be able to communicate on a mass scale.
There were posts going out from the CDC
with three likes on them, but yet my videos
were getting millions of views.
That was a problem. It's a problem
because it creates a discrepancy in trust value and perceived trust value. So when someone
who's spreading misinformation because they put on a white coat and they say some extreme,
scary, fear-mongering type content, it would get a lot of views in the algorithm. So when
people would look at a piece of content,
they would say, wow, this has a million views, fear-mongering,
and the CDC has 100 views with three likes on it.
I'm going to trust the thing with a million views
because that's social proof.
And I think because of that,
we were at a significant disadvantage
as a healthcare community as a whole.
Now, that being said,
what the CDC didn't point out enough
is all of the misinformation that was being shared, they weren't quick to fact check it.
And they also weren't quick to point out the strategies that grifters and people who were
spreading misinformation were using. One of the main strategies was because the pandemic
went on for such a long period of time,
and there were different developments that happened throughout the pandemic,
these people who were spreading misinformation were taking statements that were set at specific moments of time
and using them as weapons against the CDC or healthcare providers like myself to act like we were doing double speak
or we were the ones spreading misinformation
or contradicting ourselves.
When in reality, we needed to lead into the fact
that science evolves.
If we learn new data, we have to evolve with that data.
Otherwise, we're not doing a good job by the patients,
by the viewers, by the people who trust the CDC.
And I think because the leaders of the
CDC, those who were in front of the cameras every day, were not trained in this type of communication,
they were at a disadvantage. They frequently made missteps and it became political. It became
us versus them mentality. It became left versus right, which then ended up flipping, interestingly enough, because when the pandemic first started and the vaccine was being developed, this was Operation Warp Speed headed by President Trump.
Then we saw a few years later as mandates were being forced, perhaps where they didn't need to be, where recommendations were being made about boosters that weren't 100% accurate.
We started seeing a flipping of the left and right parties.
We started seeing more vaccine hesitancy on the right and less vaccine hesitancy on the
left, which is interesting because the anti-vaccine movement started on the West Coast with liberals.
And yet now it's completely flipped
sides. And I think partially that happened as a result of what transpired with the parties,
but also with the fact that there was a libertarian buy-in in that moment. The libertarians
who didn't like the overreach from the government with mandates surrounding masking and vaccines,
from the government with mandates surrounding masking and vaccines,
mask mandates that didn't make sense for very young children.
They started seeing that as an encroachment on their rights, so they ended up joining the people who were on the liberal side of things. Just like we're seeing it play out
right now with RFK Jr., Secretary Kennedy ran for president as a Democrat. He then didn't see success, swapped to independent, didn't see success there,
ended up joining president Donald Trump on the right.
So none of it really makes sense.
And it seems like people are going to wherever they can succeed for personal
benefit, as opposed to what they truly stand for.
And that's the most disappointing part of it all.
Yeah.
Well, we'll talk about Secretary Kennedy in a second.
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for my wardrobe and wonders for my sleep. Keep it classic and cool with long lasting Let me press you on one part of this because I mean, I've talked to a lot of physicians,
public health officials about COVID and what went wrong. And I think a lot of us feel like
one of the errors was there were statements made with more confidence than, you know,
state being stated absolutes when it was we think, you know, or we're 95% sure this is this is what we think based on the best information possible.
Like you were saying, the science changes, I mean, you know, two months into the pandemic, you know, you think one thing, six months, oh, okay, data came in, it's different.
When I have asked people about that, I often get the response again from physicians, whatever they'll say, that's all well and good.
But here's the thing, if we don't speak
with total confidence, if we don't express
that we know what we're talking about,
not only are people not going to listen,
but if I give that caveat, if I say,
I'm 95% sure of X, one of those,
what's the acronym you used?
IKA experts.
IKA experts is gonna jump on that 5% and exploit it.
And then that's what's going to go viral.
So I actually think that's a, I get that.
That's a reasonable point.
So what do you say to that?
I think it's a reasonable point short term, but long term, it actually yields much worse
outcomes.
In fact, I had Dr. Paul Offit on my podcast several times.
For people who don't know who he is, he's, well, you tell them.
He works at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
as head of their vaccine education program,
creator of the Rotavirus vaccine
that we routinely administer to children.
Fantastic physician that has been at the forefront
of battling vaccine information,
not just from a press side, but also from a literary side, numerous bestsellers,
fantastic individual who understands how to speak en masse about vaccines, I guess is a short way to
put it. And he pointed out how there was inaccuracy in the messaging from the CDC, the FDA when it came to boosters, especially as time went
on. And when he brought his concerns to a Dr. Fauci, Dr. Fauci said, look, if we send out a
mixed message saying, oh, this vaccine is good for certain groups, but not all, we'll have less
uptake and we're worried about the impact that'll have on the public. I think when you take that approach,
you will have perhaps short-term better buy-in, but long-term you're hurting the trust that
is necessary for a good doctor-patient relationship, for a good researcher-patient relationship.
And what I've seen as time has gone on is for every time we did one of those strategies
of let's just exaggerate a little bit
in order to get better by it.
The IK experts pounced on that.
And from a emotional standpoint,
that's a much more powerful message.
They lie to you versus they're not as confident as I am.
I think when folks use their BS detectors,
they're very good at it. They understand when someone's not telling them the truth. I think when folks use their BS detectors,
they're very good at it.
They understand when someone's not telling them the truth.
And when you come in as saying,
we don't know all the answers,
but we're trying to get you the best data.
Here's what we can tell you.
Here's what the recommendation is.
It's mixed.
It's not super clear, but we want you to have the truth.
I think that's much more powerful.
And I'm not saying that from just an opinion standpoint of how I feel. It's
where I've had the greatest success with my patients and in media. I just recently
did a series called Jubilee Surrounded, where you sit in the middle surrounded by
individuals who disagree with you. For my episode, it was those who were either
vaccine skeptical or full on anti-vaccine.
I approached it with, I don't have all the answers.
I know what I've experienced.
I know what research shows us.
Here's how I make my decisions.
And it allows people to go on the journey with you.
They can then back channel your logic
in order to get to where you are.
And when you try and do this paternalistic practice
of medicine or paternalistic practice of recommendations,
I feel like that only sets you up for failure.
Much in the same way how we said,
oh, if there's someone spreading misinformation,
we should de-platform them.
Again, short-term might be a good strategy,
but that de-platforming will only swap
when an opposite
political party comes into power. And then we're just silencing individuals without any
knowledge and no one knows where that really that balance should live because in healthcare,
you need to have debate. You need to be able to have discourse. That's how we push our
ideas forward. If we actually look at the history of how medical science evolved,
the person who first recommended that we wash our hands from the morgue to delivering babies
was viewed as someone who wasn't mentally healthy, who was put into an insane asylum.
So we need to be able to have this flexibility of being comfortable with debate and discourse,
but at the same time,
being able to correct if someone is full on spreading misinformation, usually for their own
benefit. And I think when we do this paternalistic thing of I know what's best for you, we only get
worse outcomes. I mean, I see that with my patients. If I tell the patient, here's what you need to do
as opposed to saying, hey, here's what I think is best, here's the reasons why I think it's best,
but we could also go in this direction or in this direction.
How do you feel?
That's when I get the best buy-in,
that's when patients feel the most empowered,
and that's when we get the best outcomes.
I'm curious, I mean, nowadays patients come in, right?
A lot of your patients, not all of them obviously,
but I bet a lot of them come in,
oh, I checked on Google, it tells me this,
or WebMD, or one of your IK influencers.
I'm curious on balance.
Do you feel like it's a plus or a minus that people have access to so much information?
I honestly don't think it matters.
It's going to be there whether we like it or not.
And I think that we've done perhaps too good of a job
at villainizing social media.
It's easy to point out its flaws.
It's easy to point out how complicated it is.
But the reality is there are potential benefits
and there are potential harms.
What we do in medicine is with any medication,
with any treatment, with any therapy,
we always try and evaluate both sides
and figure out what are the ways we can maximize benefits
and limit harms.
So I feel like we need to do the same thing
that we do in healthcare with social media.
We need to figure out what age groups,
what content creates harm,
figure out what we can use social media for
in a beneficial way and adapt to it
like we've done with any other technology in the past.
But if we constantly just fear monger and point out its negatives and encourage the
younger generations to stay off of it in a specific industry, we're going to create more
problems.
Just like when I was starting on social media, the feedback that I'd gotten from senior physicians
was don't do that.
That's unprofessional. Sharing your private life is not something
that a good doctor would do.
That could not be further from the truth.
Are there issues with sharing your personal life?
Absolutely.
Is there a loss of privacy?
Absolutely.
Can you potentially overstep and create a mistake?
You absolutely can.
But at the same time, there's been tremendous benefit.
We've educated millions across social media.
We've decreased fear about going to see the doctor.
I did a live tour where I went to multiple cities doing this silly live show that was
healthcare educational focus.
And constantly parents came up to me and said, my child was afraid to go to a doctor.
I was afraid to go to a doctor. I was afraid to go to a doctor.
But seeing how you described what should happen
during a visit, not only was I not scared,
but I wasn't scared to speak up for myself
when something went wrong.
Or perhaps I wasn't scared to seek a second opinion
when I felt like this doctor wasn't treating me fairly
because you taught me what a proper visit should go like.
And I think that if we just villainize social media,
we create tremendous harm unintentionally.
It's like a great book when Jonathan Haidt
had the subtitle to his book
When Good Intentions Carry Bad Outcomes.
I believe that was Coddling of the American Mind.
That was his subtitle.
And I think that's a good premise there
where we have good intentions by saying social media is this harmful thing could spread misinformation.
But I think if we try and remove it or fully silence it or even silence those individuals
who are spreading misinformation, we'll get into a worse position than we are and even
now.
So let's talk about Secretary Kennedy and you know, now a couple months into his tenure,
you know, someone who writes about him or I always
have to pause when I do this sort of sentence on secretary you know secretary Robert F Kennedy
comma who and I had to describe who he is and I always pause because my instinct to say he's
anti-vaccination but he would say I mean he doesn't describe himself as anti-vaccinate he's like I'm
not anti-vaccination I'm just asking questions I just want to make sure they're safe I just want
to get the data out there because it's not out there
yet.
We don't really know what we're doing.
We haven't studied these things well enough.
I'll just give you a second here.
I mean, you're trained in this field.
Is that true?
It's not true.
I don't know why he's saying the things that he's saying.
I can't attribute to his intentions.
But I can say that it's just not true.
He is anti-vaccine.
He's crossed that line numerous times.
If you look at some of his earlier interviews,
and I have a full video on this on YouTube
where I take his own sound bites from over a decade ago,
he would say things like,
I don't know anything about vaccines.
I know about mercury.
So I'm gonna just talk about mercury.
Great.
He would then say a few years later, I support vaccines.
All my children have been vaccinated.
The Lancet recently came out and said X number of million of lives were saved with vaccines.
And he was pro-vaccine at that point.
And then as time went on, he changed the name of his organization from World Mercury project to children's health defense. I think largely because in the year 2000, we removed almost all of
thimerosal from routine children's vaccinations with the exception of
multi dose flu vials, and we saw no drop in autism rates like he thought would
happen. So he changed the mercury focus to now Children's
Health Defense Fund, which had numerous claims being made about vaccinations and other exposures
that children have. And he then started making statements like on one of the talk shows,
he said, if I had the choice, I wouldn't vaccinate my children again. Or if I see a healthy parent with a child walking
and hiking, I would tell them,
better not vaccinate that child.
He's literally telling the public not to vaccinate.
That is what an anti-vaccine individual does.
And these are from his words.
I'm not giving my opinion of what his thoughts are.
These are his words.
And then there's statements of him saying that,
if you look at a child, paraphrasing
a bit, if you look at a child who's received even one or two vaccines, they're not the
same as a bright unvaccinated child.
His own children have vaccines.
That's him saying that about his own children.
So I don't know how you get in front of Congress and say, I am not anti-vaccine, but you're
making these terrible claims about children who have been vaccinated.
You're saying you wish your children weren't vaccinated and you wouldn't do it again.
You're outwardly telling people on hiking trails to not vaccinate your children.
You're going on podcasts and saying there's no such thing as a safe vaccine.
That is how I define someone who is anti-vaccine.
So whether or not he wants
better data or he doesn't understand the data, I can attribute to why he's finding these
issues, but it's misinformation driven. He's clearly taking an anti-vaccine stance. And
at the same time, I will say he flip flops quite often. How can you as secretary of health and human services
go out and say, you wouldn't vaccinate your own children.
But then a few days later, a few days before,
go out and say, the best way to protect
against these conditions is with a vaccination.
Who's gonna trust you when you say a message like that?
Can you imagine if one of my patients came into my office
and said, what's the best way to prevent measles, mumps?
And I say, vaccines.
And they go, would you vaccinate your kids again?
I say, no.
What do you think the success rate or the chance that that parent will want to vaccinate
their children?
It's absolutely an anti-vaccine stance.
The news agencies that are afraid to say it or they're putting it mildly by
saying he's vaccine hesitant, that is not true.
The vaccine hesitant label belongs to parents who are afraid of making the wrong decision
because they've heard misinformation, they've heard a scary story, they've heard of a child
who was hurt by vaccines.
Guess what?
It does happen. Every medical intervention has a potential harm to it.
But that is our job as physicians and researchers
to figure out where that line is
and figure out what that safe recommendation
would be for our patients.
And we've done that.
The world has done that.
Dozens of studies have confirmed it.
Whether we're talking about dimerosal, aluminum,
whatever ingredient you want to talk about,
it's been studied across millions of children.
Just the past month in July,
1.2 million children were tested by Danish researchers,
found that aluminum exposure from vaccines
had no impact on children.
50 conditions were studied.
I mean, to say that there's not enough research
means you don't know what research actually is.
So it's not just he's anti-vaccine,
he's actively spreading misinformation at the same time.
I'm glad you sort of drew that distinction
between the vaccine hesitant parents,
you know, and Secretary Kennedy or people like him.
Wait, can I make one analogy on that?
Sure.
Because I think it's valid to hit the message home.
Someone who is anti-vaccine, an anti-vaccine activist,
is the equivalent of someone who yells fire
in a crowded movie theater.
A vaccine hesitant parent or an individual
is someone who sees smoke in the theater and yells fire.
They might not know if there is a fire.
They don't see a fire, but they do see smoke.
So they're afraid and they want to do the right thing.
And I don't think it's fair to put those same people
in the same category.
Yeah, I mean, I have interviewed tons of people
over the years who are vaccine hesitant
and their parents, right?
I mean, they're concerned about their kids.
They're getting bombarded with this information
and they don't know who to trust and who not to trust.
Let me actually ask you to address one of the concerns
I hear in these interviews.
I'm sure you hear this in your practice sometimes
because I think it's both typical,
but also one probably on people's minds,
which is there's a lot of fear of the COVID vaccine
because it's this new technology, right?
It's this mRNA vaccine and it's new and people feel like there's no way we could
know about it, right?
Because it's so brand new.
This is scary.
We need to be careful about it.
Pretend I'm a patient.
I just came into your office.
I got a kid.
I'm like, I don't know.
I'm scared of this vaccine.
What would you say to me?
I think the timing of the situation of when this encounter is happening is really important
in deciding how I would have this conversation.
Because let's say this conversation was happening early in the pandemic in early 2021, let's
say.
In that moment, I would say, look at how devastating things have been.
Yes, perhaps we don't have the level of data that we've had with other vaccines, although
we've studied it in tens of thousands of individuals.
Here's why I think it's beneficial for you.
Here's why we need to get out of this
because if we just keep the status quo,
here's what would happen
and I would lay out the pros and cons.
But currently, this is a very different conversation
to be had.
It's have you had your initial set
of your primary series of vaccines?
Have you had at least one booster? Have you been ill with the condition? All of
those things would change my recommendation as to how that individual
should proceed. But when it comes to the technology, now these COVID-19 mRNA
vaccines have been given at such scale, it's unprecedented the scale
that they've been given on in terms of how many millions
of people, if not billions at this point, have received
the vaccine, that we have a really good understanding
of where the pros are, where the cons are, and that's
what I would discuss with the individual.
Yes, there are certain subgroups where we experience
conditions like myocarditis in young males that perhaps don't need a booster
because they're otherwise healthy,
they've had their primary series,
they've already been ill with COVID-19,
and perhaps the risk benefit isn't in their interest.
But that needs to be individualized
for the person you're speaking to,
not minimized and said,
all vaccines are perfectly safe
and there's no potential risk, there are.
But we need to discuss those individually with patients.
And we need to also not fear monger when they do happen to try and
catastrophize the situation in order to make it seem like everyone is lying to you.
They're not because we went into medical school, we went into residency in order
to do best by our patients, not to somehow exploit that trust for our own benefit.
If we wanted to do that, we'd be in the financial sector,
not in the healthcare sector.
I would take for example,
and look at the other part of the sort of Kennedy agenda,
which is food, healthy living, right?
I mean, that's the slogan, right?
Make America healthy again.
Unlike what he says on vaccines,
at least at the high, at the sort of high level
of a slogan as a theory, I think everybody,
medicine, public health things, yeah, we should, there's lots we could do to make America healthy,
right? And things involving diet activity and that's, and that sort, watching Secretary
Kennedy, watching what they're doing to sort of advance health, health, let's, let's look at food,
maybe particularly in nutrition. Do you, What do you see? Do you think like
this could be really helpful? This is going in the right direction? Do you have misgivings?
What are you saying? I think that I disagree with you. I think that his messaging surrounding food
is not much different than his messaging surrounding vaccines. He states he wants safe
vaccines. He says he wants a healthier food supply.
He wants to make America healthy.
He doesn't have a trademark on that.
Scientists, doctors, want safe vaccines and guess what?
We have them.
Doctors have been talking with patients, myself included, about lifestyle changes for well
over a decade.
He is not bringing anything new to the conversation. He's just trying to create an us versus them war
as if we don't care about our patients,
as if we don't want safety,
as if we don't care about the foods
that our patients consume.
We absolutely do.
But here's what we need
in order to make good nutrition recommendations.
We need an NIH that funds nutrition research.
Guess what RFK Jr., Secretary Kennedy is doing to that research? Cutting funding.
So yeah, you could talk all day long about improving the food supply, but if you're cutting the
research to understand how to have a healthy food supply and are scoring political points by talking about different sugar substitutions
within soda, which changes nothing from what the actual harm is of over consumption of
soda. You're distracting people from the real problem and are not actually solving that
problem. I just had on my show, Kevin Hall, who is one of our premier metabolic researchers.
Like if I had to pick the Michael Jordan of someone who's doing metabolic research
or was doing metabolic research,
it would be Kevin Hall.
He was studying how metabolism changes
during weight loss, weight gain,
about what following a low carb diet
versus a low fat diet would have on our health.
He was doing the research that Secretary Kennedy
would want the answers to.
And the second that Secretary Kennedy took over, not only was Kevin Hall's lab silenced from a
censorship standpoint, they were trying to manipulate what the studies were showing from
his lab if they didn't agree with whatever Secretary Kennedy's personal notions were, which is not
how science is practiced. A scientist gets excited when research disagrees with them
because that means they're getting a better understanding of how something works. They
can better fine tune their understanding of the subject they're studying. But the Secretary
of Health and Human Services, when he sees research that
disagrees with his personal notions, silences it, changes what is said from a press standpoint about
that research. So Kevin Hall went to them and said, if you're going to keep censoring my work,
you're not going to be investing in nutrition work, I'm going to take early retirement. And he did. We shut down his lab.
He's no longer working for the NIH.
He's raised these flags to leaders at the NIH.
No one cares.
So if you're going to tell me you want to make America healthy again, you care about
the food supply, those are all things that the medical community cares about as well.
But you're not doing anything to actually solve that problem.
You're not actually making America healthy again.
You just have a really neat slogan.
And I think that's what I hope more Americans realize.
One last question.
I think there's a lot of physicians out there who feel like you do.
They're very frustrated.
They're angry.
They don't like the vaccine misinformation.
They feel like the
the emphasis on health is at best misplaced in terms of the way it's being executed. And they
don't know what to do. You know, and you know, he's in charge of HHS, you know, he's setting policy,
he's changing, you know, he or the people who are on the Trump administration, who knows who's really
doing what, you know, they're changing who who's in charge of these agencies. They're defunding them.
They're cutting off research and it's hard to see how that changes at least in the next few years because it probably takes a
change in management in Washington.
So what's your advice to be, and everyone, you know, not everyone has 14 million followers on YouTube.
What's your advice to physicians in practice or
anybody working in healthcare or anyone who just cares about
this. What's your advice? I think that this is a wake-up call to all the major medical organizations,
the major medical groups of each subspecialty, the American Academy of Family Physicians, the AMA,
the AOA. All these groups have been quite comfortable functioning without the benefit of social media.
And what they've come to realize is,
now that they are facing such a challenge,
they don't have a megaphone in order to reach millions
of people to have the impact that they did 30 years ago
when they would go on primetime news
and have the audience's attention
in order to make meaningful change
within their
subspecialties or organizations.
So they need to drastically, drastically change funding to start implementing social media
programs, working, collaborating with individuals who are doing a great job, and most importantly,
unifying together.
I don't see enough unifying statements calling for Secretary Kennedy to resign.
I've publicly called on him to resign.
I've written a Fox News op-ed calling on him to resign.
A lot of the medical institutions are quiet.
They're slowly starting to roll out messaging, but it's slow, it's ineffective.
There's a lot of fear behind it.
Even industry leaders, Dr. Sanjay Gupta, industry giant,
one of the most trusted voices in healthcare on CNN
over the last decade, someone I look up to
throughout my years of communicating on healthcare.
Before November, 2024, quite vocal about the fear
that secretary Kennedy or at that time, RFK Jr.
could become head of HHS.
Since then, pretty silent.
I want all the medical voices,
whether you're a community physician,
whether you're Dr. Sanjay Gupta,
whether you're the AMA, AWA, to come together
and not just say what he's doing is wrong
and nitpicking specific statements.
Realize that he doesn't care when you nitpick.
He is winning. And when he's winning to the degree that he is, care when you nitpick. He is winning. And when
he's winning to the degree that he is, we need to do something drastic. We all need
to unify together, get all of the deans of medical schools to come together and call
on Secretary Kennedy to resign in order to have the best potential chance that the public
listens. There's no way the public ignores the message
of every med school dean, of every physician,
of every medical organization unifying and coming together
to say this person should not be in charge,
not just for the fact that he's under equipped
and doesn't understand the research,
but he's actively spreading harm.
When I was making my YouTube video on his Twitter profile,
he has misinformation scaring people away
from the Gardasil vaccine,
saying that not only is it ineffective,
he says that it claims more lives than it saves.
Countries across the globe,
millions of people across the globe disagree,
science disagrees,
but just because one guy believes it to be the way he wants
it to be, we're suddenly making changes to our healthcare organization, the most powerful
country in the world.
It's so disappointing and not something I would ever expect to have seen.
I'm imagining the conversation with those medical school deans.
And I know at least what some of them are going to say.
Is they're going to say, well, that's all well and good,
but he controls our funds.
If we come out against it,
and this administration has shown
is absolutely willing to be vindictive,
that you go after them, they go after you.
And that's my residency funding,
that's my research funding, that's my clinical funding,
you name it.
We couldn't survive that.
What would you say to a medical school dean
sitting across from you who says, I'd love to,
I'd love to be more vocal.
I can't.
The stamina of vindictiveness runs out and it runs out quick.
You could be vindictive in episodes.
You can't be vindictive against every medical school dean in the United States, every major
medical organization in the US.
There's too many people against you. And again, this isn't a left, right or center issue.
This is apolitical, it's clinical.
He's saying inaccurate things over and over again.
This isn't about, oh, I just don't like what he stands for.
I love that we talk about vaccine safety.
I love that we have a food supply in our conversation.
That's all well and good.
But what has been done is tremendous cuts
to nutrition research, instilling fear surrounding vaccines,
the worst measles outbreak that we've had in over 30 years.
We're getting cuts to organizations like UNICEF, Gavi.
Gavi vaccinates more than half the world's children.
And if Secretary Kennedy doesn't realize that by vaccinating the world, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi,
Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi,
Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi,
Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi,
Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, Gavi, office. Well on that note, Dr. Mike, thanks for joining us. We really appreciate all your time.
Everybody follow Dr. Mike, follow the bulwark, and we'll see you next time. Thank you so much, Jonathan.