Cathy Meehan: Welcome to the Meehan Mission Podcast. This is a place where we like to look at truth in medicine. We also take a look at the current healthcare system, and we want to empower parents with options and choices for their health and the health of their children.
Cathy Meehan: In today’s episode, we sit down with Dr. Ken Stoller. He’s a pediatrician—although he doesn’t like the word pediatrician—and he’s been battling for transparency in the vaccination program for a very long time. We’ll also discuss the lawsuit he has with the CDC, because what are the long-term effects and outcomes of children who have gone through the complete childhood vaccine schedule from birth through their teenage years? I don’t think we know that answer. So sit back, enjoy the show, and let’s begin.
Cathy Meehan: Welcome to the Meehan Mission Podcast. Today I am thrilled to bring to our audience Dr. Ken Stoller. Dr. Stoller, I’ve heard about you, I’ve seen some of your work, and I’m so grateful you’re here today.
Dr. Ken Stoller: Thank you, Cathy. It’s great to be here.
Cathy Meehan: For those who may not be familiar with you, can you tell us a little bit about your background and how you came into this work?
Dr. Ken Stoller: Sure. I trained as a pediatrician, but over time I became increasingly uncomfortable with the direction of conventional pediatrics, particularly the vaccination schedule. I began seeing children with chronic illnesses, developmental delays, autism, autoimmune conditions, and neurological issues, and I felt that the standard medical model was not addressing root causes.
Dr. Ken Stoller: I transitioned into integrative and functional medicine because I wanted to understand why children were getting sick and how to help them heal, not just manage symptoms.
Cathy Meehan: You’ve been very outspoken about vaccines and medical gaslighting. Can you explain what you mean by that?
Dr. Ken Stoller: Medical gaslighting occurs when legitimate concerns raised by patients or parents are dismissed, minimized, or pathologized. In the context of vaccines, parents are often told that adverse reactions are coincidental, rare, or unrelated, even when there is a clear temporal association and biological plausibility.
Dr. Ken Stoller: When parents are told “it’s all in your head” or “there’s no evidence,” despite their lived experience, that is gaslighting. It erodes trust and prevents honest scientific inquiry.
Cathy Meehan: You are currently involved in a lawsuit with the CDC. Can you explain what that’s about?
Dr. Ken Stoller: Yes. The lawsuit centers on a fundamental question: what are the long-term health outcomes of children who receive the full recommended childhood vaccine schedule compared to those who do not? The CDC does not have this data.
Dr. Ken Stoller: Despite claims that vaccines are “safe and effective,” there has never been a properly designed, long-term, fully vaccinated versus unvaccinated study. That’s a major scientific and ethical problem.
Cathy Meehan: That’s shocking to hear, especially given how strongly vaccines are promoted.
Dr. Ken Stoller: It should concern everyone. Science is supposed to ask questions, not shut them down. When questioning becomes taboo, we’re no longer practicing science—we’re practicing dogma.
Cathy Meehan: What have you personally witnessed in your clinical practice?
Dr. Ken Stoller: I’ve seen children regress after vaccinations. I’ve seen immune dysfunction, mitochondrial injury, gut dysbiosis, and neuroinflammation. I’ve also seen improvement when these underlying issues are addressed and when toxic exposures are reduced.
Dr. Ken Stoller: That doesn’t mean every child reacts the same way. It means susceptibility matters—genetics matter, timing matters, total toxic load matters.
Cathy Meehan: Parents are often told vaccines are one-size-fits-all.
Dr. Ken Stoller: And that’s simply not biologically accurate. There is no medical intervention that is risk-free for every individual. Vaccines should not be exempt from that reality.
Cathy Meehan: What advice would you give to parents who feel intimidated or silenced?
Dr. Ken Stoller: Trust your instincts. Ask questions. Demand informed consent—not just a signature on a form, but a real discussion of risks, benefits, and alternatives. And seek practitioners who respect you as a thinking, caring parent.
Cathy Meehan: Dr. Stoller, thank you for your courage, your integrity, and your commitment to truth.
Dr. Ken Stoller: Thank you, Cathy. Conversations like this are essential if we want real progress in medicine.