Blog
What Is Thimerosal, and Why Does RFK Jr. Say It’s Dangerous?

An important advisory committee to the federal government has voted this week to withdraw its support for flu shots containing the preservative thimerosal.
Kennedy himself has been critical of thimerosal specifically; he wrote a book published in 2014 that called for banning thimerosal in vaccines because of an alleged autism link.
Multiple research studies, however, have found that any concern that thimerosal causes autism is unfounded.
What Is Thimerosal?
Is Thimerosal Safe?
“It’s been around for a long time, and it’s safe,” says Thomas Russo, MD, a professor and the chief of infectious disease at the University at Buffalo Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.
Still, people may see that thimerosal is mercury-based and get “a little freaked out,” he acknowledges.
Plus, “The amount contained in these vaccines is minuscule compared with the exposure we get from these compounds in everyday life and things that we ingest,” Dr. Russo says.
For example, “You are exposed to more mercury eating a tuna sandwich than you are getting a vaccine,” Dr. Labus says.
Very Few Vaccines Contain Thimerosal
“The only flu shots that contain thimerosal are those that are in vials intended for multiple adult patients,” Labus says. “Individually packaged flu doses do not contain it, nor do any pediatric vaccines.”
These days, most people receive single-dose flu vaccines, Russo says.
Attacks on Thimerosal Could Undermine Confidence in All Vaccines
Since thimerosal is found in only a small number of flu vaccines, Russo says ACIP’s decision will likely not have much of an impact on the vaccine landscape. It also doesn’t mean the preservative isn’t safe, he says.
But he worries that the move could “undermine, in the American public, the view about the safety of vaccines.”
Labus agrees. “Anti-vaxxers on the committee are rolling out their misinformation campaigns’ greatest hits to try to scare people away from getting vaccinated,” he says. He says the committee’s decision has “absolutely no basis in rational, scientific thought.”
Vaccines in the United States are “extremely well vetted” and safe, Russo emphasizes, and everyone should still get a flu shot.
“The benefits of the vaccines approved in this country far outweigh the potential adverse effects,” he says.