Hours into Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s hearing with the Senate Finance Committee on Wednesday to vote on his nomination for U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, Senator Tina Smith (D-MN) accused him of spreading lies and misinformation, particularly when it comes to mental health care and antidepressants.
In 2024, Kennedy speculated that antidepressant use could explain the rise of school shootings, despite a lack of scientific evidence to support such claims.
“There’s no time in American history or human history that kids were going to schools and shooting their classmates,” Kennedy told the comedian Bill Maher on an episode of the podcast “Club Random With Bill Maher” in April 2024. “It happened, you know, it really started happening conterminous with the introduction of these drugs, with Prozac and the other drugs.”
When Smith asked Kennedy if he stood by this scientifically-unfounded claim, he lacked a clear response. “It should be studied along with other potential culprits,” he said, adding, “I just want to have good science.”
But studies show no causation between antidepressant use and school shootings, and Smith added that “most school shooters were not even treated with antidepressants,” and among those who were, there was “no evidence of association.”
Kennedy proceeded to compare serotonin uptake inhibitors (SSRIs), a common type of antidepressant including Prozac, Zoloft and Lexapro, to a heroin addiction.
“Listen, I know people, including members of my family, who’ve had a much worse time getting off of SSRIs than people have getting off heroin,” he told Smith. Kennedy was previously addicted to heroin.