Saying "NO" to Bobby Jr.'s phony science
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| Fighting for the right to die from a preventable disease |
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
announced an overhaul of the immunization schedule January 5, paring
the number of universally recommended immunizations from 17 to 11.
Since then, at least 17 states have announced that they
won’t follow new CDC vaccine schedule: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Washington,
and Wisconsin.
Instead, these states say they plan to follow vaccine
guidance from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), which
continues to recommend immunization plans approved by the CDC prior to the
Trump administration.
EDITOR'S NOTE: On Jan. 12, the RI Department of Health sent out a news release stating:
"The CDC's changes to the U.S. childhood vaccine schedule did not follow established procedures for vaccine recommendations. This change also creates confusion for families already trying to navigate a complex system and sows doubt about the effectiveness and science behind vaccines.."
Further, "Rhode Island's school immunization schedule is not affected by this change. All current immunization requirements for school and childcare attendance remain in effect, and schools should continue to follow existing state regulations and guidance issued by RIDOH."
- Will Collette
Choosing evidenced-based vaccine advice
“The decision to change CDC’s childhood immunization
schedule is reckless and deeply dangerous,” said Massachusetts Public Health
Commissioner Robbie Goldstein, MD, PhD, in a statement announcing the state’s
rejection of the new vaccine schedule.
The new CDC vaccine schedule, based on immunization policy
in Denmark, “abandons decades of rigorous, evidence-based science and replaces
clear public health guidance with confusion and doubt,” Goldstein said. “At a
moment when we are seeing measles outbreaks, the resurgence of whooping cough,
and a flu season that has already taken the lives of children in our state,
this ill-advised federal action puts families in an impossible position and
puts infants, children, and communities at risk.”
Minnesota health officials said they want to help alleviate
confusion over vaccines.
“Aligning our recommendations with professional medical
associations helps provide clarity and stability for families and providers by
using a proven set of recommendations that doctors, and other clinicians,
already know and trust,” Minnesota Commissioner of Health Brooke Cunningham,
MD, PhD, said in a Minnesota Department of Health news release.
Several California counties—including Los Angeles County, Santa Barbara County,
and San Diego County—also
rejected the new CDC schedule.
In addition, Kansas City’s Children’s Mercy Hospital, a
pediatric hospital that serves both Missouri and Kansas, announced that
it plans to continue following AAP
vaccine guidance.
Calling on Congress to investigate
Late last week, the AAP and more than 200 health
groups sent a letter to Congress urging
lawmakers “to conduct swift and robust oversight regarding the abrupt
changes to the U.S. childhood vaccine schedule.”
In their letter, the groups urge Congress “to investigate
why the schedule was changed, why credible scientific evidence was ignored, and
why the committee charged with advising the HHS [Health and Human Services]
Secretary on immunizations did not discuss the schedule changes as a part of
their public meeting process.”
Health officials, largely in blue states, have banded
together in recent months to protect vaccine access and provide evidence-based
health information to their residents.
California, Oregon, Washington and Hawaii formed
the West Coast Health Alliance in early September. Just weeks
later, nine states announced
the formation of the Northeast Public Health Collaborative, which
includes Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland,
Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, as well
as Baltimore and
New York City.
Fifteen states and territories led
by Democratic governors have united to create the Governor’s Public Health
Alliance, which includes California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware,
Guam, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, North
Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, and Washington.
Legislators in several of these states have passed
legislation in recent month to protect access to vaccines, in spite of any
action taken by the federal government.
Both California and Illinois passed laws last
year empowering their states to follow the vaccine advice of independent
medical organizations, rather than a federal advisory panel to the CDC whose
members were handpicked by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a longtime
anti-vaccine activist.
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore last week proposed similar legislation,
called the Vax Act, which would allow the state to bypass federal vaccine
guidance.
The bill would permit the state health secretary to
recommend vaccines and other preventive care based on guidance from the AAP,
the American Academy of Family Physicians, and the American College of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
“The federal government’s rapid shifts and the unnecessary
confusion surrounding vaccine policy put public health at risk,” Moore said in a statement.
“In Maryland, we will continue to protect our people by ensuring our guidance
is driven by proven science, not political headwinds. Our legislation reflects
a simple belief: access to lifesaving medicines like vaccines is essential to
the health and safety of every Marylander.”
