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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Tuesday, Jul 8 2025

Full Issue

Medical Groups Sue To Restore Access To Covid Jabs For Kids, Pregnant People

The medical organizations contend Health and Human Services and its chief, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., are trying to undermine vaccines by limiting access. In other vaccine news: Nervous parents are asking about an accelerated vaccine schedule; a look at thimerosal in vaccines; and more.

Six leading medical organizations filed a lawsuit on Monday against Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the health secretary, and the federal Department of Health and Human Services, charging that recent decisions limiting access to vaccines were unscientific and harmful to the public. The suit, filed in federal court in western Massachusetts, seeks to restore Covid vaccines to the list of recommended immunizations for healthy children and pregnant women. (Mandavilli, 7/7)

After Robert F. Kennedy Jr. became the nation鈥檚 top health official in February, pediatrician Jeff Couchman started getting a lot of questions from worried parents. 鈥淭hey鈥檇 ask: 鈥楢re vaccines going to be available? Can we give my kid every possible shot today just to make sure?鈥欌 said Couchman, who practices at Mesquite Pediatrics in Tucson, Arizona. (Smith and Amponsah, 7/7)

Thimerosal, often referred to by its brand name Merthiolate, is an organomercury compound used for its antiseptic and antifungal properties. Thimerosal can be found in various medical applications, some of which include immunoglobulin (Ig) preparations, skin test antigens, and antivenins. Despite being used in vaccines since the 1930s, thimerosal has been heavily scrutinized by the public, especially since the early 2000s. Several agencies and news articles have raised concerns about the frequent use of thimerosal as a vaccine preservative, stating mercury exposure and cautioning against its use, especially for children and pregnant or lactating mothers. (de Souza, 7/7)

More on vaccines 鈥

Republican lawmakers 鈥 including the speaker of the Utah House 鈥 stood with about 60 demonstrators at the Orrin G. Hatch U.S. Courthouse on Monday, just before a trial was to begin for a plastic surgeon charged with running a COVID-19 fraud scheme. Several of the demonstrators dressed in red, white and blue, and held American flags and handwritten signs in support of Dr. Michael Kirk Moore Jr. One sign read 鈥淚s this what we do to heroes?鈥 while another said, 鈥渃oercion is not consent.鈥 Another sign, quoting an X post attributed to Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a longtime vaccine opponent and now Health and Human Services secretary, read: 鈥淒r. Moore deserves a medal for his courage and his commitment to healing!鈥 (Moilanen, 7/7)

Unlike other kids in Massachusetts, students living in one Boston suburb won鈥檛 be able to go back to school next month unless they鈥檝e had their chickenpox and measles shots, as well as other routine childhood vaccinations. 鈥淎ny student not fully vaccinated without exemption will be excluded from school,鈥 Newton Public Schools Superintendent Anna Nolin wrote in a memo last month. The directive followed a chickenpox outbreak among students, as well as rising threats of measles, Nolin said. (Edwards, 7/5)

More from HHS and RFK Jr. 鈥

Health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Monday praised a company that makes $7-a-pop meals that are delivered directly to the homes of Medicaid and Medicare enrollees. He even thanked Mom鈥檚 Meals for sending taxpayer-funded meals 鈥渨ithout additives鈥 to the homes of sick or elderly Americans. ... But an Associated Press review of Mom鈥檚 Meals menu, including the ingredients and nutrition labels, shows that the company鈥檚 offerings are the type of heat-and-eat, ultraprocessed foods that Kennedy routinely criticizes for making people sick. (Seitz and Aleccia, 7/7)

It鈥檚 not uncommon for Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to mention sperm counts when he makes a public appearance. In recent television interviews, political speeches and congressional hearings, Kennedy has repeatedly claimed that teenage boys today have half the sperm that men in their 60s do 鈥 a stat that鈥檚 not exactly accurate. Kennedy has cited the talking point as evidence of a broader health crisis in the U.S. (Bendix, 7/3)

Less than three months after he declared war on synthetic food dyes, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has already secured the cooperation of the makers of some of America鈥檚 most colorful culinary products. If they fulfill their promises, Jell-O snacks, Kool-Aid beverages, and Lucky Charms cereals, among a host of other foods, will be rid of synthetic dyes by the end of 2027. But the candy industry and its most colorful chocolate treat, M&M's, are a big obstacle standing between Mr. Kennedy and the ability to claim total victory. (Gay Stolberg and Creswell, 7/7)

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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