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Friday, Sep 5 2025

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Massachusetts, New York Break With FDA On Covid Vaccine Limitations

While Massachusetts will mandate insurance coverage for state-recommended shots, New York plans to give pharmacists the authority to offer vaccines to anyone over 3 without a prescription. Plus: Hawaii joins the West Coast Health Alliance; Georgia pumps the breaks on covid shots; and more.

Massachusetts became the first state in the country Thursday to require insurers to cover the cost of COVID shots and other inoculations recommended by state health officials, in another move to counter the Trump administration鈥檚 efforts to undo the long national consensus on vaccines. The rift was prompted by new federal limitations on who should receive COVID vaccines under Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. that have created confusion among consumers, pharmacies, and physicians and made it difficult for even those with demonstrated need to get booster shots. (Laughlin and Schmeiszer, 9/4)

In an effort to ensure more New Yorkers can get the latest Covid vaccines, Gov. Kathy Hochul is planning to sign an executive order that would authorize pharmacists to provide the shot to almost anyone who wants it, the governor鈥檚 office said Thursday. The executive order is intended to undo limits that the federal government has imposed. Last week, the Food and Drug Administration approved updated versions of the Covid vaccine, but authorized them only for people 65 and older or for younger people who have an underlying medical condition that makes Covid-19 more dangerous. Children remain eligible if a medical provider is consulted. (Goldstein, 9/4)

Hawaii is joining a coalition of West Coast, Democratic-led states forming a new public health alliance in opposition to Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.聽California, Oregon and Washington state announced the alliance Wednesday, which聽officials say will provide 鈥渆vidence-based immunization guidance鈥 rooted in 鈥渟afety, efficacy, and transparency鈥 to ensure residents receive 鈥渃redible information free from political interference,鈥 according to a statement from California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D). (O鈥機onnell-Domenech, 9/4)

Big pharmacies and public health clinics in Georgia are not yet giving this year鈥檚 COVID-19 booster shots, or are putting new restrictions in place, amid vaccine uncertainty under Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy. Doctors hope the confusion will be resolved in a couple of weeks, when a federal committee appointed by Kennedy is scheduled to decide on whether to recommend the shot. It is not certain how the committee will vote. (Hart, 9/4)

Texas parents will no longer have to wait weeks for a vaccine exemption form to be mailed to them if they want their children opted out of state-required immunizations to attend school. This week, the state health agency quietly unveiled the new downloadable vaccine exemption form, the result of state Rep. Lacey Hull鈥檚 House Bill 1586 which went into effect on Monday. Along with the form, the Texas Department of State Health Services also published a document listing the benefits and risks of immunization. (Langford, 9/4)

Republican officials in Florida announced this week that they want to eliminate all vaccine mandates for schools. It鈥檚 not that simple: It will require action from state lawmakers. But the announcement raises several questions about the future spread of infectious diseases and the disproportionate impact on infants, children, the elderly and immunocompromised people in the state and country. (Rodriguez and Nittle, 9/4)

Michael Osterholm, a former Biden administration adviser on COVID-19, said Wednesday that 鈥淔lorida鈥檚 going to become a hotbed of transmission鈥 after Sunshine State officials announced they will seek to make the state the first in the U.S. to officially remove school vaccine mandates. 鈥淚 would have to tell you, as a parent or a grandparent, I wouldn鈥檛 want my kids to go into Florida in the years ahead, to go to Walt Disney World, or any place like that, because Florida鈥檚 going to become a hotbed of transmission by eliminating this particular mandate, and I think 鈥 unfortunately timely for that to be true,鈥 Osterholm told CNN鈥檚 Anderson Cooper on his show. (Suter, 9/4)

In other vaccine developments 鈥

The Department of Health and Human Services is preparing to issue a no-bid contract for a firm run by an ally of President Trump to poll Americans on their 鈥減erspectives around vaccines.鈥 The move follows a wide-reaching effort by the health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., to dismantle parts of the nation鈥檚 health infrastructure that develop and make recommendations for the use of vaccines. A day before the contract proposal was posted last week, Mr. Kennedy moved to fire the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention because of disagreements over his vaccine policies. The polling firm, HarrisX, is part of Stagwell, a marketing company led by Mark Penn, a former political adviser to Bill and Hillary Clinton who has now become a vocal supporter of Mr. Trump. (Cameron, 9/4)

Whistleblower complaints by two former top National Institutes of Health officials offer their inside accounts of the Trump administration鈥檚 targeting of vaccine science at the world鈥檚 largest funder of biomedical research and the reach of Matthew Memoli, the agency鈥檚 deputy director, in enacting those policies. (Oza and Molteni, 9/4)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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