Saturday, September 13, 2025
How long can one RSV shot protect seniors?
Study shows surprising two-year shield
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
One shot of an RSV vaccine protects adults ages 60 or older
from RSV-associated hospitalization and critical illness during two consecutive
RSV seasons, according to a study published in JAMA on August
30 by the IVY Network research group.
RSV causes substantial seasonal illness during fall and
winter in the U.S., with an estimated 100,000-150,000 hospitalizations and
4,000-8,000 deaths occurring annually among adults 60 or older.
The results reinforce the recommendations for RSV vaccines
in older adults and lay the groundwork for understanding how long a single dose
of the vaccine may be effective, according to Wesley Self, MD, MPH, principal
investigator for the IVY Network and Senior Vice President for Clinical
Research at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
"These results clearly demonstrate that the RSV
vaccines prevent hospitalizations and critical illness due to RSV infection
among older Americans," Self said. "It is exciting to see the public
health benefits of this new vaccination program."
Friday, September 12, 2025
Flu vaccines show benefits for the heart in new studies
Flu vax linked to heart health
Three new studies show high-dose flu vaccines carry a lower risk of myocarditis and cardiovascular events, and flu vaccination offers protection against acute heart failure when administered to hospitalized patients.
Although the protective effects may be small, the first two studies describe high-dose vaccines outperforming standard seasonal influenza vaccines in older adults.
Currently, high-dose vaccines are recommended for use
in adults 65 years and older, and they contain roughly four times the
antigen—the part of the vaccine that produces antibodies against influenza
virus—as standard-dose flu vaccines.
Myocarditis risk lower with high-dose vaccine
In the first study, based on findings from the Pragmatic
Randomized Trial to Evaluate the Effectiveness of High-Dose Influenza Vaccines
(DANFLU-2 trial) in JAMA Network Open, the risk of myocarditis or
pericarditis, or inflammation of the cardiac muscle or membrane around
it, was lower in people receiving the high-dose inactivated flu vaccine
than in those getting a standard-dose vaccine.
Influenza is a known risk factor for developing myocarditis
or pericarditis, and this large Danish study looked at the prevalence of the
inflammatory condition across three flu seasons, from 2022 to 2025. Of 332,438
participants randomized, 331,143 did not have a history of myocarditis or
pericarditis.
Monday, September 8, 2025
Bobby Jr.'s CDC meltdown hurts more than US
People are already dying from Kennedy-caused chaos
![]() |
He really is nuts |
That pressure came to a head last week with the sacking of recently appointed CDC director Susan Monarez. According to her lawyers, the longtime government scientist, who had been in the role less than a month, was targeted after she refused to “rubber-stamp unscientific, reckless directives”.
Monarez will be replaced by Jim O'Neill, deputy director of the Department of Health and Human Services. Critics note he has no medical or scientific training.
On the same day as Monarez’s firing, three senior officials resigned. They included the CDC’s chief medical officer, and two others with leadership roles in areas including vaccines and emerging diseases.
I worked at the CDC between 1986 and 1995. Almost all of my work was with activities overseas.
While the CDC is a key institution overseeing and funding public health in the US, it’s also instrumental in global health. Consequently, turmoil at the CDC could have an impact not just in the US, but around the world.
Vaccine skepticism: a threat to public health
Soon after the inauguration of Donald Trump for the second time in January 2025, threats to American public health became clear. RFK Jr was confirmed as the Secretary of Health and Human Services in February, with authority over the CDC.
By April, 25% of CDC staff had been fired and its contract spending was cut by 35%. Cancelled CDC programs included those focused on the prevention of lead poisoning in children, environmental health, and sexually transmitted infections including HIV.
Notably, RFK Jr has a long history of vaccine skepticism.
In 2019–20, more than 5,700 people became infected when a measles outbreak ravaged the island nation of Samoa. Some 83 people died, most of them children.
In the lead up, a number of ads spread vaccine misinformation on Facebook, sowing doubt about safety of the measles vaccine. Some were found to have been funded by the Children’s Defense Fund, an organization founded by RFK Jr.
EDITOR'S NOTE: The Children's Defense Fund is mis-identified above. It is venerable civil rights and anti-poverty advocacy group that doesn't deserve to be tied to RFK by the author's error. Bobby Jr.'s anti-vaxxer group is called Children's Health Defense. - Will Collette
RFK Jr’s department has dismissed and replaced the 17 expert members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices with eight new people – a number of whom have reportedly expressed anti-vaccination views.
During RFK Jr’s tenure so far, his department has:
- reduced access to COVID vaccines for children and pregnant women
- cancelled contracts to develop new mRNA vaccines worth US$500 million
- revived the search for a long disproved link between childhood vaccines and autism.
Sunday, September 7, 2025
Bobby Jr. is menace and has got to go
Nine former CDC directors issue dire warning over Kennedy actions
Reactions to the recent firing and resignations of top Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) leadership continued to reverberate over the Labor Day weekend, along with fallout linked to controversy over recent federal COVID vaccine policies.During the waning days of August, the White House fired
newly confirmed CDC director Susan Monarez, PhD, after she refused to rubber-stamp vaccine
directives from Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary Robert F. Kennedy,
Jr. At the same time, four of the CDC’s top scientists resigned for similar
reasons, prompting deep
concerns from health leaders, medical groups, and lawmakers.
The upheaval at the CDC came in the same week the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) cleared
the updated COVID vaccines for use in the upcoming respiratory
virus season, which came with narrowed indications and other policy changes
that will make it for difficult for some groups to be vaccinated, including
lower-risk adults and young children.
Nine former CDC directors issue dire warning
On September 1, nine CDC directors who served under both
Democrat and Republican administrations going back to 1977 published an opinion
piece in the New York Times,
writing that the upheaval at CDC under Kennedy’s leadership at HHS over the
past several months is unlike anything the CDC or the county has experienced
before.
They referenced Kennedy’s promotion of unproven treatments
and downplaying of vaccines during the measles outbreak, weakening of key
programs including violence and injury prevention, and cancellation of vaccine
contracts that leave the country unprepared against future pandemic threats.
They also cited his reduced support for global vaccination efforts
and appointing people who align with his dangerous and unscientific views.
“We are worried about the wide-ranging impact that all these
decisions will have on America’s health security,” the former CDC directors
wrote, adding, “This is unacceptable, and it should alarm every American,
regardless of political leanings.”
Friday, September 5, 2025
Bobby Junior demands obedience from doctors on vaccine policy
RFK Jr. Warns Docs of Liability if They Stray From CDC on Vaccines
By Joyce Frieden,
Washington Editor, MedPage Today
"AAP should ... be candid with doctors and hospitals
that recommendations that diverge from the CDC's official list are not shielded
from liability under the 1986 Vaccine Injury Act," Kennedy posted this week on X.
The AAP recommendations,
released on Tuesday, included a strong endorsement of COVID-19 shots for
children ages 6 months to under 2 years. The group also recommended COVID shots
for older children if the parents want to do that. Those recommendations differ
from guidance issued by the CDC,
which has said the vaccines are not specifically recommended for children
although they can still get them if parents and providers agree.
Was Kennedy correct about the liability issue? "As has
become common for Secretary Kennedy, this is misleading," Dorit Reiss,
PhD, a law professor at the University of California San Francisco, said in
a Facebook post on
Wednesday. "Whether a vaccine falls under VICP [the Vaccine Injury
Compensation Program, the part of the Vaccine Injury Act that deals with
liability issues] has nothing to do with whether AAP recommends it, and the
liability protections are not removed by this."
Wednesday, September 3, 2025
RFK Jr. War on Vaccines continues as he puts anti-vaxxer in charge of vaccine review
ACIP member critical of COVID and mRNA vaccines to lead review
Lisa
Schnirring,
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) vaccine advisory group has long had a work group in place to review the latest COVID-19 vaccine science, including weighing the risks and benefits, but a newly constituted group will launch a sweeping new review of the vaccines led by a member who has opposed COVID vaccines.
The Brownstone Institute on August 22 reported that
Retsef Levi, PhD, one of seven members appointed to the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices (ACIP) by US Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has been appointed to lead the COVID vaccine review. On
August 20, the CDC posted updated terms of reference for the COVID vaccine work
group, which is lengthy. Some of the topics include impacts from repeated
boosting and mapping policies in other countries.
Levi does not have a biomedical degree or clinical medicine
experience. He has a doctorate in operations research and is a professor of
operations management at MIT Sloan School of Management. On social media, Levi has called mRNA
vaccines dangerous and said they should be removed from the market. Retsef Levi spent 12 years as an intelligence
officer in the IDF - Israeli Defense Forces
Scaled-back involvement of CDC staff
Levi told the Brownstone Institute that the work group
hasn’t been fully formed yet but will include fellow ACIP members Robert
Malone, MD, and James Pagano, MD. Malone is a vaccinologist and scientist who
was involved in early mRNA vaccine research and an outspoken critic of mRNA
COVID vaccines. Pagano is a retired emergency medicine physician.
The new terms of reference said CDC staff will not serve as
members of the work group but may provide administrative support or technical
support as needed and that work group leadership and others will ensure that
there is no undue influence from the CDC or any special-interest group.
At the first
meeting of the newly appointed group in June, the leaders of the
group signaled there will be changes to the ACIP work groups and that two more
will be added: one on the cumulative effect of vaccines on the recommended CDC
vaccine schedule for children and adolescents and the other to have another
look at vaccines that have been on the market for more than 7 years, such as
the measles, mumps, rubella, and varicella (MMRV) vaccine in children younger
than 5 years.
A month later, the HHS announced that ACIP’s nonvoting
liaison groups from medical and public health organizations are barred
from participating in ACIP work groups, saying that they are
expected to be biased, based on their constituencies. Groups such as the
American Academy of Pediatrics and the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists have often assisted with efficacy and safety reviews, along with
risk-benefit analyses.
Concerns about more data misrepresentation under
Kennedy
Some experts are casting doubt on whether the new COVID
vaccine review will be rigorous and sound. In making unilateral vaccine
recommendations and changes to vaccine recommendations, Kennedy and his
surrogates have cherry-picked and misrepresented data to fit their anti-vaccine
narratives.
Jake Scott, MD, an infectious disease physician and clinical
associate professor at Stanford University who has published responses to Kennedy’s
critiques on vaccines, including claims that led the HHS to cancel 22 mRNA
vaccine projects, told the New York Times,
“I'm concerned that it won't be rigorous science, that it's going to be more
statistical manipulation.”
Scott is also involved with the Vaccine Integrity Project at
the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy
(CIDRAP), publisher of CIDRAP News.
HHS spokesman Andrew Nixon told the Times that
though individual group members may have initial personal views, “the task
force's work will be guided by data, transparency, open-mindedness and open
deliberation—not by any single opinion.”
Tuesday, September 2, 2025
Cop killed at the CDC by guy likely agitated by vaccine misinformation peddled by Bobby Jr.
Time for RFK Jr. to resign or be removed
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention workers whose jobs have been reinstated after dizzying Trump administration disruptions say they remain stuck in a budgetary, political, and professional limbo.
Their work includes major agency priorities such as HIV testing and monitoring, as well as work at the nation’s leading sexually transmitted infections lab. And while employees are back, many projects have been canceled or stalled, as funding disappears or is delayed.
“For a while, work was staring at a blank screen,” an HIV scientist said. “I had a couple of projects before this. I’m trying to get them restarted.”
“We don’t know what’s happening or what to do,” said an HIV prevention researcher who was fired then rehired.
These employees voiced deep concern over the future of the agency and its work on HIV and other threats. The unprecedented downsizing could lead to loss of life and higher spending on medical care, they say. Their uncertain employment status has sunk morale. Many worry about the future of public health.
On Aug. 8, a gunman identified by Georgia authorities as Patrick Joseph White fired shots at CDC buildings in Atlanta. A first responder on the scene, DeKalb County police officer David Rose, was killed. White, who was found dead, was possibly motivated by his views on vaccines, according to news reports.
Health leaders, medical groups: CDC leader exodus puts nation's health at risk
Americans will die due to Bobby Junior's destruction of the agency
As news broke lof the ouster of newly confirmed Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Susan Monarez, PhD, and the resignations of some of the agency's top scientists, reactions came fast and furious from public health leaders, professional groups, and lawmakers.The upheaval at the CDC comes just weeks after a gunman attacked the campus, reportedly fueled by grievances about the COVID vaccine.
The CDC has also been rocked by watered-down COVID vaccine recommendations that
came from Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and
his surrogates who have announced new reviews of autism causes and COVID
vaccines, both hot-button issues of Kennedy and other vaccine critics.
Michael Osterholm, PhD, MPH, director of the Center for
Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP) at the University of Minnesota,
publisher of CIDRAP News, said the loss of top CDC staff is the result of
failed leadership of extremists at HHS, which oversees the CDC. "These
departures are a serious loss for America. They make our country less safe and
less prepared for public health emergencies."
Saturday, August 30, 2025
Columbia scientists may have found a universal antiviral
But it involves mRNA tech, which Bobby Kennedy has defunded
Columbia University Irving Medical Center
For a few dozen people in the world, the downside of living with a rare immune condition comes with a surprising superpower -- the ability to fight off all viruses.
Columbia immunologist Dusan Bogunovic discovered the
individuals' antiviral powers about 15 years ago, soon after he identified the
genetic mutation that causes the condition.
At first, the condition only seemed to increase
vulnerability to some bacterial infections. But as more patients were
identified, its unexpected antiviral benefits became apparent. Bogunovic, a
professor of pediatric immunology at Columbia University's Vagelos College of
Physicians and Surgeons, soon learned that everyone with the mutation, which
causes a deficiency in an immune regulator called ISG15, has mild, but
persistent systemic inflammation.
Thursday, August 28, 2025
Bobby Junior's lunatic leadership leads to 'Wednesday Night Massacre at CDC'
Chaos Erupts as RFK Jr. Accused of Destroying Agency From Within
Jon
Queally for Common Dreams
It's being called the Wednesday Night Massacre.
Total "chaos" erupted at the Centers for Disease
Control on Wednesday after the forced removal of CDC Director Susan Monarez,
handpicked by Donald Trump just
months ago, was followed by the disgruntled resignations of other top officials
at the agency who openly warned that health secretary Robert F. Kennedy
Jr. is running the place into the ground while putting the nation's public
health system at risk of collapse and threaten millions of lives.
That Monarez was no longer the director was announced by the
Department of Health and Human Services, led by RFK Jr., via social media on
Wednesday afternoon. Hours later, lawyers for Monarez said her removal was a
firing, not a resignation, and they accused the director of "weaponizing
public health for political gain" after she clashed with Kennedy over new
immunization guidelines related to the Covid-19 vaccine.
Her ouster, her legal team said, "is about the
systematic dismantling of public health institutions, the silencing of experts,
and the dangerous politicization of science. The attack on Dr. Monarez is a
warning to every American: Our evidence-based systems are being undermined from
within."
In an announcement earlier Wednesday, the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) narrowed the kinds of conditions people need to have in
order to receive approval for available Covid-19 vaccines.
As the Washington Post reports, the new FDA guidance sparked concern among public
health experts who say the policy shift "injects uncertainty for Americans
not considered high-risk who want to get another coronavirus vaccine. They said
it's not clear who will ultimately be able to get the shot, whether insurance
will cover it and whether they can get vaccinated at their local
pharmacy."
In response to Monarez's firing—and other underlying issues
at the agency under RFK Jr.'s leadership, at least four other top CDC officials
resigned in protest Wednesday night.
Demetre C. Daskalakis, director of the National Center for
Immunization and Respiratory Diseases; Daniel Jernigan, director of the
National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases; Dr. Jennifer
Layden, who led the office of public health data; and CDC Chief Medical Officer
Debra Houry all submitted their resignations.
Dr. Richard Pan, a pediatrician and a former Democratic
state senator in California, was among those who declared the events should be
seen as the "Wednesday Night Massacre at the CDC"—a reference to the
infamous Saturday Night Massacre during the Watergate scandal under President
Richard Nixon in 1973.
In his explosive resignation
letter made public, Dr. Daskalakis said he did not make the decision
lightly.
"However," he stated, "after much
contemplation and reflection on recent developments and perspectives brought to
light by Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., I find that the views he and his
staff have shared challenge my ability to continue in my current role at the
agency and in the service of the health of the American people. Enough is
enough."
The letter continues:
I am unable to serve in an environment that treats CDC as a tool to generate policies and materials that do not reflect scientific reality and are designed to hurt rather than to improve the public’s health.
The recent change in the adult and children’s immunization schedule threaten the lives of the youngest Americans and pregnant people. The data analyses that supported this decision have never been shared with CDC despite my respectful requests to HHS and other leadership.
This lack of meaningful engagement was further compounded by a “frequently asked questions” document written to support the Secretary’s directive that was circulated by HHS without input from CDC subject matter experts and that cited studies that did not support the conclusions that were attributed to these authors.
Having worked in local and national public health for years, I have never experienced such radical non-transparency, nor have I seen such unskilled manipulation of data to achieve a political end rather than the good of the American people.
It is untenable to serve in an organization that is not afforded the opportunity to discuss decisions of scientific and public health importance released under the moniker of CDC. The lack of communication by HHS and other CDC political leadership that culminates in social media posts announcing major policy changes without prior notice demonstrate a disregard of normal communication channels and common sense.
Having to retrofit analyses and policy actions to match inadequately thought-out announcements in poorly scripted videos or page long X posts should not be how organizations responsible for the health of people should function.
Critics of RFK Jr. and Trump, including public health
advocates and Democratic lawmakers charged with oversight, slammed the chaos
and the deeper threat to the American people that the administration's
misguided attacks on the CDC have triggered.
"President Trump and Sec. Kennedy are trying to purge
anyone who stands up against their anti-science agenda at the CDC," said Sen.
Rafael Warnock (D-Ga.). "They're risking disease outbreak and another
pandemic just to advance their own extremist goals."
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)
called for an immediate hearing before the Committee on Health, Education,
Labor, and Pensions (HELP), of which he is the ranking member. "It's
outrageous that Sec. Kennedy is trying to fire the CDC Director—after only a
few weeks on the job—for her commitment to public health and vaccines,"
said Sanders. "Vaccines save lives. Period."
One former CDC staffer, who went unnamed, told Rolling Stone that what's happening
now at the agency is "the work of a death cult."
According to Dr. Georges C. Benjamin, MD, executive director
of the American Public Health Association, the ouster of Monarez, just weeks
after her confirmation in the US Senate, "is yet another glaring sign of
Secretary Kennedy’s failed leadership and reckless mismanagement. His tenure
has been marked by chaos, disorganization, and a blatant disregard for science
and evidence-based public health."
The episode, Benjamin continued, "underscores his
administrative incompetence and his disdain for the expertise that the public
and our public health agencies rely on. RFK Jr. must be removed from his
position."
He wasn't the only one calling for Kennedy's immediate
removal. "Fire him," declared Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) in a social
media post.
"We cannot let RFK Jr. burn what's left of the CDC and
our other critical health agencies to the ground—he must be fired," Murray
said in a separate statement. "I hope my Republican colleagues who have
come to regret their vote to confirm RFK Jr. will join me in calling for his
immediate termination from office."
Dr. Robert Steinbrook, the health research director for
Public Citizen, said, "Ousting the first Senate-confirmed CDC director
weeks into the start of her tenure makes absolutely no sense and underscores
the destructive chaos at RFK Jr.'s Department of Health and Human
Services."
"The CDC is being decapitated," warned Steinbrook.
"This is an absolute disaster for public health."
Wednesday, August 27, 2025
Trump and Bobby Kennedy Jr. are destroying global science
A return to the Dark Ages
Eight months into Donald Trump’s second presidency of the United States, truth and science are again under attack – with global consequences. USAID, which tackled HIV, TB, malaria and child malnutrition is gone. Funding has been withdrawn from GAVI, a public–private global alliance that helps buy vaccines for the world’s poorest children. Malnourished children are already dying.
Besides these brutal consequences, the scientific machine that delivered America’s scientific and technological dominance is being ruthlessly dismantled.
Across the spectrum of science, some 4,000 research grants have been cancelled. Unbelievably, bird-flu experts were fired in the middle of an outbreak. That was topped last May by cancelling a US$600M grant to the company Moderna to develop an mRNA vaccine against bird flu.
And on August 5, US$500 million was cancelled for 22 more projects developing mRNA vaccines. Bear in mind that under Operation Warp Speed, the first Trump administration funded the development of Moderna’s mRNA vaccine against COVID. Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech both delivered mRNA vaccines in the record time of less than a year, winning mRNA vaccine technology a Nobel Prize in 2023.
It’s not just American science that’s being dismantled.
Surprising finding could pave way for universal cancer vaccine
Except Bobby Kennedy Jr. has cancelled federal funding for mRNA research
By Michelle Jaffee, University of Florida
An experimental mRNA vaccine boosted the tumor-fighting effects of immunotherapy in a mouse-model study, bringing researchers one step closer to their goal of developing a universal vaccine to “wake up” the immune system against cancer.Published in Nature Biomedical Engineering, the
University of Florida study showed that like a one-two punch, pairing the test
vaccine with common anticancer drugs called immune checkpoint inhibitors
triggered a strong antitumor response.
A surprising element, researchers said, was that they
achieved the promising results not by attacking a specific target protein
expressed in the tumor, but by simply revving up the immune system — spurring
it to respond as if fighting a virus. They did this by stimulating the
expression of a protein called PD-L1 inside of tumors, making them more
receptive to treatment. The research was supported by multiple federal agencies
and foundations, including the National Institutes of Health.
Senior author Elias Sayour, M.D., Ph.D.,
a UF Health pediatric oncologist and the Stop Children's Cancer/Bonnie R.
Freeman Professor for Pediatric Oncology Research, said the results reveal a
potential future treatment path — an alternative to surgery, radiation and
chemotherapy — with broad implications for battling many types of
treatment-resistant tumors.
“This paper describes a very unexpected and exciting
observation: that even a vaccine not specific to any particular tumor or virus
— so long as it is an mRNA vaccine — could lead to tumor-specific effects,”
said Sayour, principal investigator at the RNA Engineering Laboratory within
UF’s Preston
A. Wells Jr. Center for Brain Tumor Therapy.
“This finding is a proof of concept that these vaccines
potentially could be commercialized as universal cancer vaccines to sensitize
the immune system against a patient’s individual tumor,” said Sayour, a McKnight Brain Institute investigator
and co-leader of a program in immuno-oncology and microbiome research.
Get information about UF Health brain tumor clinical
trials here.
Tuesday, August 26, 2025
Sorting Out Covid Vaccine Confusion: New and Conflicting Federal Policies Raise Questions
COVID has killed 1.1 million Americans already so get vaccinated to not become a statistic
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a longtime anti-vaccine activist, has upended the way covid vaccines are approved and for whom they’re recommended, creating uncertainty where coverage was routine.
Agencies within HHS responsible for spelling out who should get vaccinated aren’t necessarily in sync, issuing seemingly contradictory recommendations based on age or risk factors for serious disease.
But the ambiguity may not affect your coverage, at least this year.
“I think in 2025 it’s highly likely that the employer plans will cover” the covid vaccines, said Jeff Levin-Scherz, a primary care doctor who is the population health leader for the management consultancy WTW and an assistant professor at Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health. They’ve already budgeted for it, “and it would be a large administrative effort to try to exclude coverage for those not at increased risk,” he said.
With so much in flux, it’s important to check with your employer or insurer about coverage policies before you roll up your sleeve.
Here’s what we know so far, and what remains unclear.
It’s Almost Flu Season. Should You Still Get a Shot, and Will Insurance Cover It?
Yes and Probably
![]() |
The Onion |
Somewhere, at some point, you might remember flu shots. Get your flu shot. Get their flu shots. Or should you? Can you? Is that still a thing?
Amid political chatter about vaccines and the government entities that oversee them, it’s understandable to wonder where all this leaves the 2025-26 flu vaccine.
In short: Yes, the flu shot is still a thing. And four doctors we spoke to said they recommend you get your flu shot this year. (See the source list below this article.)
Here are some answers to common questions:
Monday, August 25, 2025
‘Alternative Facts’ Aren’t a Reason To Skip Vaccines
Health Secretary Bobby Junior promotes bad medicine
And over the past six months, the stakes have been life or death: Trump’s health officials have been endorsing alternative facts in science to impose policies that contradict modern medical knowledge.
It is an undeniable fact — true science — that vaccines have been miraculous in preventing terrible diseases from polio to tetanus to measles. Numerous studies have shown they do not cause autism. That is accepted by the scientific community.
Yet Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has no medical background or scientific training, doesn’t believe all that. The consequences of such misinformation have already been deadly.
For decades, the vast majority Americans willingly got their shots — even if a significant slice of parents had misgivings. A 2015 survey found that 25% of parents believed that the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine could cause autism. (A 1998 study that suggested the connection has been thoroughly discredited.)Despite that concern, just 2% of children entering kindergarten were exempted from vaccinations for religious or philosophical objections. Kids got their shots.
But more recently, poor government science communication and online purveyors of misinformation have tilled the soil for alternative facts to grow like weeds. In the 2024-25 school year, rates of full vaccination for those entering kindergarten dropped to just over 92%. In more than a dozen states, the rate was under 90%, and in Idaho it was under 80%. And now we have a stream of measles cases, more than 1,300 from a disease declared extinct in the U.S. a quarter-century ago.
It’s easy to see how both push and pull factors led to the acceptance of bad science on vaccines.
The number of recommended vaccines has ballooned this century, overwhelming patients and parents. That is, in large part, because the clinical science of vaccinology has boomed (that’s good). And in part because vaccines, which historically sold for pennies, now often sell for hundreds of dollars, becoming a source of big profits for drugmakers.
In 1986, a typical child was recommended to receive 11 vaccine doses — seven injections and four oral. Today, that number has risen to between 50 and 54 doses by age 18.
RFK Jr. is increasing your risk of dying from cancer
Kennedy bans funding for vaccines that show the most promise at stopping cancer
By Brian Moench, Utah News Dispatch
“It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so.” Mark Twain’s quip perfectly describes the entire Trump Administration, but none more so than medical crackpot, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
Perched with his brain worm on top of Health and Human Services, Kennedy probably affects your health more than your family doctor. But unlike your doctor, Kennedy has no medical degree, no hospital privileges, never cared for a patient, never discovered a drug, never published a research paper, and wouldn’t know which end of a stethoscope to use if his life or yours depended on it.
Nonetheless he has opinions, and he’s enforcing them on you, on all of us. This makes as much sense as pilots flying airplanes who have never seen a cockpit or placing the future of the United States in the hands of Donald “Windmills Cause Cancer” Trump.
Many actual medical experts believe vaccines have done more good for humanity than any other public health advance in history. COVID vaccines saved nearly 20 million lives globally in their first year alone. They also reduced the risk of severe, debilitating outcomes and long COVID after infection. But Kennedy knows “for sure” that decades of knowledge accumulated by the entire world’s medical community is wrong, and he’s eager to straighten us out.
Messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccines have been under development for 30 years. Compared to older technologies they are cheaper, can be mass produced faster, and can be changed more quickly to address inevitable virus mutations like with COVID.
This technology also has great promise to treat cystic fibrosis, sickle cell anemia, and diabetes. Two American scientists won the Nobel Prize for their mRNA discoveries. To real scientists, mRNA vaccines are not controversial. Without them COVID would probably still be spreading death and disability across the globe.
In May Kennedy yanked $590 million from developing pandemic flu vaccines such as bird flu. Rick Bright, who led Health and Human Services Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority during Trump 1.0, said, "Disinvesting from mRNA strips us of one of the fastest tools we have to contain the next pandemic.”