The Department of Health and Human Services released a report blaming childhood chronic diseases on ultraprocessed foods and other factors. However, the report cited several fake publications, which led researchers to deny authorship. Notable discrepancies involved a nonexistent paper attributed to Katherine Keyes and inaccuracies related to Robert L. Findling's research. After investigative coverage by The New York Times, the White House corrected the report, while HHS characterized the misattributions as minor errors, stressing the report's substantive findings on children's health issues.
The report cited numerous fake publications, claiming chronic diseases in children stem from various factors; some cited researchers denied authorship of the papers attributed to them.
The White House quickly corrected the report after media exposure of false citations, while HHS downplayed these inaccuracies as minor errors, emphasizing the report's importance.
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