The article criticizes the MAHA children's health report for mis-citing research, including nonexistent or misrepresented sources, highlighting the importance of accurate citations and rigorous review in scientific and government reports to maintain credibility and trust.
Originally Published 7 months ago — by Rolling Stone
A report on children's health by RFK Jr.'s 'Make America Healthy Again' commission is found to contain fake research, misinterpretations, and signs of AI-generated content, raising questions about its validity and the use of AI in government reports.
The MAHA report led by RFK Jr. contains citations to studies that do not exist, including a paper attributed to Dr. Katherine Keyes, prompting corrections and concerns over citation practices, though officials claim the substance of the report remains valid.
The Trump administration's MAHA report on children's health contains numerous errors, including references to studies that do not exist or are misrepresented, raising concerns about the report's credibility and the review process behind it.