People usually turn to experts for clarity in uncertain times, trusting that training, data, and authority will guide them toward better choices.
Yet history shows that confident advice often mean nothing. Predictions are framed as certainties, treatments are prescribed as safe, and risks are minimized as unlikely, all before reality proves otherwise.
Words carry a lot of weight which makes these mistakes troubling, lives are shaped, money is moved, and trust is invested based on words that can be wrong.
This collection highlights moments when expertise failed, not to dismiss experts altogether, but to remind us that even the most trusted voices can be very wrong sometimes.
1
"Problems Are Contained"
Ben Bernanke told Congress in March 2007 that the subprime mortgage problem was “likely to be contained.” Within a year, the entire financial system was unraveling.
2
Baby Walkers help babies walk
Pediatric advice once promoted walkers as helpful. Later, research showed they delayed development and caused injuries, leading to bans and warnings.
3
MMR vaccine scare
A now-discredited doctor claimed a common childhood vaccine was unsafe. His advice spread worldwide, leading parents to skip immunizations. Outbreaks of preventable diseases followed, and his study was later exposed as fraudulent.
4
Tamiflu stockpiles
WHO and governments spent billions stockpiling Tamiflu. Later Cochrane reviews showed it only shortened flu symptoms by about half a day, with no strong evidence it prevented complications.
5
Jim Cramer on Bear Stearns
On Mad Money, Cramer told viewers: "Bear Stearns is fine, don’t take your money out." Days later, the firm collapsed, proving how TV finance "expertise" can mislead.
6
L’Aquila earthquake advice
Government-appointed scientists reassured residents there was "no danger" from tremors. Days later, a 6.3 quake killed 309 people.
7
Leaded gasoline declared “safe”
GM chemist Thomas Midgley Jr. claimed leaded fuel was harmless. In fact, it poisoned workers, polluted cities, and left a lasting global health crisis.
8
Dietary cholesterol limits
For decades, experts warned people to avoid eggs and other cholesterol-rich foods. In 2015, U.S. guidelines reversed course, admitting cholesterol in food isn’t a major health concern.
9
Challenger launch approval
NASA managers approved launch despite engineers warning the O-rings could fail in cold weather. The shuttle exploded 73 seconds after liftoff, killing all seven crew.
10
“British beef is safe”
UK Agriculture Minister John Gummer publicly fed his daughter a beef burger to prove there was no danger from BSE. Soon after, the link to the fatal vCJD disease emerged.
11
WHO on Covid spread
Tweeted: "No clear evidence of human-to-human transmission." The virus was already spreading between people, costing critical time.
12
Vioxx for pain
Approved by the FDA and heavily promoted, thi drug was withdrawn after being linked to tens of thousands of heart attacks and strokes.
13
Frances O. Kelsey blocks thalidomide
While many experts abroad approved thalidomide as safe for pregnancy, FDA reviewer Frances O. Kelsey refused. Her skepticism kept it off the U.S. market and spared thousands of babies from birth defects.
14
Ulcer treatment
Doctors blamed stress and spicy food, prescribing antacids and even surgery. Barry Marshall and Robin Warren proved bacteria caused ulcers, and won the 2005 Nobel Prize.
15
The letter in The New England Journal of Medicine
Claimed hospital patients given opioids almost never became addicted. It was later cited thousands of times as proof of safety, fueling widespread prescribing and contributing to the opioid crisis.