Peter McCullough, On the Record: A Real Cardiologist, a Pandemic Spotlight, and the Disputes That Followed
Somewhere in 2021, a patient is scrolling at 2 a.m., scared, holding a prescription bottle and a phone full of contradictions. One clip shows a silver-haired cardiologist in a suit, calm and credentialed, telling a U.S. Senate panel that people are dying for lack of early treatment. The next clip says that same man has been censored, sued, and stripped of his board certifications. Both clips are real. NU's job isn't to tell you who the good guy is — it's to lay the paper trail flat so you can read it yourself. Records over spin, kooky till proven. This is not medical advice; talk to your own doctor about your own care.
What this page is. A factual reading of the public record on Dr. Peter A. McCullough — credentials, COVID-era prominence, and the documented disputes — with every claim attributed to a source. Where a claim is contested, we say so and name who's contesting it. We do not endorse his medical positions, and we do not "debunk" them as settled. We report what's on paper.
1. The credentials are real, and that's where confusion starts
A lot of the heat around McCullough comes from people assuming he's a fringe figure with no training. The record says otherwise: he is a genuinely credentialed cardiologist and internist with a long mainstream career before the pandemic.
Per his Wikipedia biography and prior institutional bios【1】:
- BS from Baylor University (1984), MD from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (1988), and an MPH from the University of Michigan (1994).
- Internal-medicine training and a cardiology fellowship; he practiced as a cardiologist and internist for decades.
- Senior academic and hospital roles over the years, including section chief of cardiology at the University of Missouri–Kansas City, leadership at St. John Providence Health System in Detroit, and — the affiliation that later became a legal flashpoint — vice chief of internal medicine at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas (joined 2014), with a professorship tied to Texas A&M【1】.
- A heavy publication record and editorial posts — he has served as an editor at cardiology journals including Reviews in Cardiovascular Medicine and Cardiorenal Medicine【1】.
Evidence level: documented. Whatever one thinks of his pandemic claims, "he's not really a doctor" is not a fair reading of the record. He was a practicing, publishing cardiologist with establishment posts long before 2020.
2. The pandemic spotlight: early-treatment advocate and Senate witness
When COVID hit, McCullough became one of the most visible advocates for early outpatient treatment of the disease — treating people at home, fast, before hospitalization, often with multi-drug protocols.
- In August 2020, he was lead author of a paper in The American Journal of Medicine laying out a rationale for early outpatient treatment of SARS-CoV-2【1】. (Context worth flagging: the journal's editors later published commentary distancing themselves from some of its speculations — see the disputes section.)
- On November 19, 2020, he testified before the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, in a hearing on COVID-19 outpatient treatment convened by Senator Ron Johnson【1】. That testimony — and later Johnson-hosted roundtables — is the source of much of the footage that circulates today.
- Early on, his advocacy centered on repurposed drugs such as hydroxychloroquine for early disease. Over time his public profile shifted toward opposition to COVID-19 vaccines, including claims that healthy younger people and the previously infected had little reason to be vaccinated, and assertions that large numbers of Americans had died from the shots【1】.
Evidence level: documented (that he said these things, in these venues). Whether the underlying medical claims are correct is a separate question, taken up below and disputed by major medical bodies.
3. The disputes — named, dated, and attributed
This is where "kooky till proven" cuts both ways. McCullough's specific claims have been formally contested by employers, journals, and certifying boards. Here's the paper trail.
a) Board certifications — revoked by the ABIM (he contests the basis)
The American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) moved to revoke McCullough's certifications over COVID-19 statements it judged to be misinformation.
- In October 2022, McCullough announced that an ABIM committee had recommended revoking his certifications in internal medicine and cardiovascular disease; he said he would appeal【1】【2】.
- By reporting in January 2025, the ABIM had revoked both certifications; MedPage Today and others reported the revocation, and ABIM's own lookup tool listed his internal-medicine and cardiovascular-disease certifications as "Not Certified, Revoked."【2】
- ABIM's stated basis, per coverage, was that his public statements were scientifically inaccurate and potentially harmful to public health【2】. McCullough disputes that characterization and has framed the action as punishment for dissent【1】.
Status: documented action, disputed justification. The revocation itself is on the record; whether it was warranted is exactly the contested question.
b) The Baylor lawsuit — over using the Baylor name
- McCullough left Baylor Scott & White in a February 2021 separation agreement. In July 2021, Baylor Scott & White sued him, alleging he kept invoking a Baylor affiliation in media appearances after leaving — "dozens, if not hundreds" of times, per the complaint — and sought an injunction and damages【3】【4】.
- The case was dismissed on January 17, 2023 by a Dallas County district court. Reporting noted that a voluntary dismissal with prejudice of this kind is typically entered after a settlement【3】. McCullough's camp framed the outcome as vindication【3】.
Status: documented suit, dismissed; settlement terms not public. Note this lawsuit was about name/affiliation use, not a ruling on his medical claims.
c) Withdrawn / retracted papers
- A 2021 paper McCullough co-authored with Jessica Rose — on myocarditis reports in the VAERS database after COVID-19 vaccination — was published in Current Problems in Cardiology (an Elsevier journal) and then removed. Retraction Watch reported it was first marked a "temporary removal," and Elsevier later said it would be permanently removed【5】.
- A separate 2023 paper he co-authored, a review of autopsy findings after COVID-19 vaccination, was also retracted【1】.
- Supporters read these removals as suppression; the journals and critics frame them as failures of methodology or peer review【1】【5】.
Status: documented withdrawals; the reason is itself the dispute. NU won't pretend a removal proves a paper was right or wrong — only that it was pulled, and that both sides read the pulling very differently.
d) Where the major bodies stand
On the substance, federal health agencies (CDC, FDA) and most large studies do not support claims that COVID-19 vaccines caused mass deaths, and they continued to recommend vaccination for the groups they cover【1】. McCullough rejects that consensus. We're not asking you to take either on faith — we're telling you the consensus position and his position are openly opposed, and labeling the death-toll claims as disputed, not settled fact.
4. Where he is now
McCullough did not disappear from medicine — he rebuilt outside the institutions that broke with him. Per his biography【1】:
- He is Chief Scientific Officer of The Wellness Company, a health firm founded in 2022.
- He runs the McCullough Foundation and remains a prolific writer and speaker, including a widely circulated 2021 Joe Rogan podcast appearance that pushed his reach far beyond medicine.
- He is a member of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS) — itself a group with contested mainstream standing.
5. NU's bottom line
- He is a real, long-credentialed cardiologist and internist. Pre-pandemic, that's not in serious dispute【1】.
- He became a leading early-treatment advocate and a Senate witness (Nov. 19, 2020, Ron Johnson's HSGAC hearing)【1】.
- His COVID claims drew formal pushback: ABIM revoked his board certifications (recommended 2022, revoked by Jan. 2025), Baylor sued him over name use (filed 2021, dismissed 2023), and two co-authored papers were withdrawn/retracted【1】【2】【3】【5】.
- He disputes all of it as suppression of dissent; the boards, journals, and federal agencies dispute his claims as inaccurate and harmful. Both sides are on the record, and the death-toll claims remain disputed, not proven.
We're not handing you a verdict. We're handing you the file. Read the primary sources below, and bring questions — not slogans — to your own physician.
A note on imagery (real sources only)
For a photo, use public hearing footage, which is U.S. government / public material: a still from McCullough's November 19, 2020 testimony before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, available via C-SPAN's archive and the committee's own video record. Before publishing any portrait, verify the license on Wikimedia Commons (the Peter A. McCullough article page links any available media and its license) — do not reuse a random web image. If no suitably licensed portrait exists, use the public Senate hearing still with a "U.S. Senate HSGAC hearing, Nov. 19, 2020" credit.
Sources
- Peter A. McCullough — Wikipedia (credentials, positions, AJM paper, Senate testimony, retractions, current affiliations) — en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_A._McCullough
- MedPage Today / coverage of ABIM revoking McCullough's board certifications (recommended Oct. 2022; revoked by Jan. 2025; "Not Certified, Revoked") — reported via MedPage Today and aggregators
- The Wellness Company press release / The Texan reporting on the Baylor case dismissal (Jan. 17, 2023, dismissed with prejudice) — prnewswire.com and Texan coverage
- Cardiovascular Business / WFAA / Medscape — Baylor Scott & White lawsuit over use of its name (filed July 2021) — cardiovascularbusiness.com; wfaa.com; medscape.com/viewarticle/958916
- Retraction Watch — VAERS/myocarditis paper "temporary removal" then permanent removal by Elsevier (Oct. 2021) — retractionwatch.com/2021/10/17/ and /2021/10/25/
NU explainer — sourced to McCullough's biography, court reporting, ABIM coverage, and Retraction Watch. We separate what's documented (his credentials, his testimony, the lawsuit, the revocation, the withdrawn papers) from what's contested (whether his medical claims are correct, and why his papers were pulled). We say which is which.