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WASHINGTON, March 7 (Reuters) – A U.S. autism advisory board will not hold a scheduled meeting ​in March, the Department of Health ‌and Human Services said on Saturday.
The Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee makes recommendations to the health secretary on federal ​autism research spending and coordinates federal ​autism efforts. The group was scheduled to ⁠meet on March 19.

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“The IACC will not ​meet later this month,” said HHS spokesperson Andrew ​Nixon, without sharing additional details of the cancellation or a new meeting date. “Further information will be shared as ​available.”
The panel was remade in January by Health Secretary ​Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a longtime anti-vaccine activist who has ‌suggested ⁠vaccines cause autism.
More than a third of the new committee members have promoted the debunked link between vaccines and autism. Some new members have said they ​aim to ​steer federal ⁠dollars toward investigating causes of autism as well as other issues ​like co-occurring medical disorders.
Last week, a ​dozen ⁠autism advocates, researchers and several former committee members formed the Independent Autism Coordination Committee to create its own ⁠strategic ​plan for autism research as ​a counter to the Kennedy-appointed group.

Reporting by Leah Douglas in ​Washington; Editing by Sergio Non and Tomasz Janowski

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