RFK Jr’s MAHA Report Is Full of Fake Citations Leading Many To Believe It Was Written Using AI, X Is Not Surprised
Written by djfrosty on May 30, 2025

Source: The Washington Post / Getty / RFK Jr. / MAHA
This latest mess involving RFK Jr. and his “Make America Healthy Again” commission report highlights just how dysfunctional and stupid the Trump administration is.
We already know that RFK Jr. is a certified quack and conspiracy theorist who has no business being the head of Health and Human Services, and he continues to show us why.
The MAHA report, which is intended to address the reasons for the decline in US life expectancy, is currently being criticized because all signs indicate that it was generated using AI, specifically ChatGPT.
An investigation by NOTUS revealed that the MAHA report is marred by errors, including broken links, missing or incorrect authors, and incorrect issue numbers.
Other damning revelations highlighted by NOTUS included some studies in the report being misstated to support the report’s claims, as well as studies that didn’t exist.
NOTUS found that at least seven of the cited sources weren’t even real.
But Wait… There’s More
The Washington Post conducted its own investigation and found that 37 of the 522 citations appeared numerous times in the report. URLs in the report were found to contain “oaicite,” a marker used by OpenAI and applied to responses provided by AI models, such as ChatGPT, which is a strong indication that Kennedy and HHS used AI to make the report.
Another giveaway that the MAHA report is nothing more than the product of blatant AI use is the presence of “hallucinations” throughout it, a term used to describe the false information that artificial intelligence models tend to produce.
There is also the fact that RFK Jr. hasn’t been shy about what he describes as the “AI Revolution” and said during a House Committee meeting in May that HHS is “already using these new technologies to manage health care data more efficiently and securely.”
The White House Claims It Was Just “Formatting Issues”
When pressed on the report, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt referred to the errors as “formatting issues,” while avoiding discussion of the use of AI tools.
Leavitt, who has put on a masterclass in lying like her boss since taking on the role of press secretary, also added that the MAHA report is “backed on good science that the federal government has never recognized.”
NOTUS: A NOTUS investigation found that the MAHA commission report cites studies that appear to not exist. Does the WH have confidence that the info coming from HHS can be trusted?
LEAVITT: Yes. I understand there were some formatting issues, but it does not negate the substance… pic.twitter.com/i1d5SMlGYy
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) May 29, 2025
The Washington Post says the report has since been “updated” with some of the oaicite markers being removed and the nonexistent sources replaced with alternate citations.
In a statement sent to The Washington Post, Department of Health and Human Services spokesman Andrew Nixon said “minor citation and formatting errors have been corrected, but the substance of the MAHA report remains the same — a historic and transformative assessment by the federal government to understand the chronic disease epidemic afflicting our nation’s children.”
Social media isn’t shocked by these developments because of RFK Jr.’s reputation for being a liar and a pusher of medical falsehoods. He also claimed he would find the cause of autism by September.
If you know anything about RFK Jr the fact that he falsified the MAHA report should not surprise you in the least. pic.twitter.com/hNvIQHLC5M
— Christopher Webb (@cwebbonline) May 30, 2025
You can see more reactions in the gallery below.
1. Welp
FRAUDULENT—RFK Jr’s report on “Make America Healthy Again” (MAHA) cited completely FAKE studies that do not even exist, & completely misinterprets others. Truly wild. This is the same guy who bypassed all CDC scientists to put out anti vax nonsense. https://t.co/kxdUbhJd2O pic.twitter.com/NvDXxNtv5l
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) May 29, 2025
2. Bruh
RFK Jr.’s ‘MAHA Report’ includes at least 7 cited sources that do not appear to exist.
One scientist stated that “the paper cited is not a real paper that I or my colleagues were involved with,” when informed of the report. pic.twitter.com/p45tYX8D9v
— FactPost (@factpostnews) May 29, 2025
3. Make it, make sense
A 600 million dollar grant to research a vaccine for bird flu was canceled yesterday after RFK Jr turned in a HHS report that was riddled with untruths! Numerous studies in it were not correct and it’s said to have been made by using Chat GBT! 😡😡😡 pic.twitter.com/QtRBfScGO8
— Suzie rizzio (@Suzierizzo1) May 30, 2025
4. Exactly
RFK: journals are fraudulent
MAHA report: AI generated without human review, uses studies that don’t exist and cites authors saying things they never said.
This would be a career-ending scandal in any other universe. https://t.co/mc2qYdiu72
— Tyler Black, MD (@tylerblack32) May 29, 2025
5.
The MAHA report, promoted by RFK Jr. as “gold-standard science,” is riddled with bogus citations:
⭐️ 7 studies don’t exist — one author: “The paper cited is not a real paper.”
⭐️ Key conclusions misquoted
⭐️ One study exists only in the report
⭐️ Dozens more have broken links or… pic.twitter.com/nohSQc7EDR— Carolyn Barber, MD (@cbarbermd) May 29, 2025
6.
I have just read the MAHA report in full.
I want to make my position on this clear: The impact of this report, if actually taken seriously, will (on net) make America less healthy.
Many have already pointed out that the report had erroneous citations. But this isn’t even the… pic.twitter.com/6L7C0w2tfK
— Avi Bitterman, MD (@AviBittMD) May 29, 2025
7.
RFK Jr.’s MAHA report cited some studies that don’t exist to justify its recommendations for America’s 74 million children. The White House called it “formatting issues.” Anderson is Keeping Them Honest. pic.twitter.com/RuyMIUtNK0
— Anderson Cooper 360° (@AC360) May 30, 2025
8.
On @ac360, discussed how White House reports usually have dozens of people read and re-check every word and reference
Reports are then run by real experts to make sure substance is right
MAHA Report appears to have done none of that
The level of incompetence here is shocking https://t.co/qiJWjh5mhq
— Ashish K. Jha, MD, MPH (@ashishkjha) May 30, 2025
9.
Fabricated and Misleading Citations in the MAHA Report
The “Make America Healthy Again” (MAHA) report claims to be grounded in science. But when you dig into the references—it starts to fall apart. Let’s take a look. 🔍👇 pic.twitter.com/zfDiX5Y0Oi
— IntegralAnswers (@IntegralAnswers) May 29, 2025
10.
The academic fraud perpetuated by the MAHA report is extraordinary. There isn’t a student who wouldn’t fail and be subject to disciplinary action or an academic who wouldn’t lose their faculty position over something like this.
— Michael Ostacher, MD, MPH (@RecoveryDoctor) May 29, 2025