New ACIP Charter, Published Thursday, Revises Purpose Of Panel, Who’s On It
As The New York Times reported, the changes would allow HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to rebuild the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices with some or all of its previous members and resuscitate at least some of their decisions. One health expert told MedPage Today that it was "another alarming action by Secretary Kennedy."
The Trump administration published on Thursday a new charter for the federal vaccine advisory committee that would allow Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to reclaim his changes to national vaccine policy, despite a ruling last month by a federal judge blocking them. The ruling, in a lawsuit brought by several medical organizations against Mr. Kennedy, froze the committee and reversed many of the decisions the health secretary and the panel had made in the last year to rescind longstanding recommendations for childhood vaccines. The judge also said the committee鈥檚 members were not qualified to recommend shots for Americans. (Mandavilli, 4/9)
Infectious disease experts warned that the renewed charter for the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) could become a revolving door for the return of vaccine-skeptical members. The new charter, published on Thursday, places greater emphasis on potential vaccine harms and widens the door to membership beyond ACIP's past emphasis on expertise in immunization practices, a move that follows a federal judge's ruling that Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. likely violated federal procedures when he revamped the CDC's influential vaccine panel in 2025. (Rudd, 4/9)
Also 鈥
The Trump administration is putting Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on a low-risk messaging diet ahead of the midterm election. The Secretary of Health and Human Services has publicly and notably swallowed his trademark vaccine skepticism in recent weeks, even in front of the friendliest audiences. (Cohrs Zhang and Nix, 4/9)
When a federal judge in Mississippi ordered a sweeping rollback of the state鈥檚 strict school vaccine rules in 2023, the ruling hit some doctors like 鈥渁 gut punch鈥. Mississippi had for years achieved some of the highest vaccination rates in the US for children 鈥 a point of pride in a place that consistently ranks at the bottom of other health measures. The state health director warned of the dire possible consequences, including a comeback of preventable illnesses like measles, diphtheria and pertussis 鈥 known as whooping cough. (Smith, 4/9)
With baby Arthur too young for the measles vaccine and a sibling due in June, the Otwells grew nervous when the threat of the highly contagious virus started factoring into their grocery run. ... By Arthur鈥檚 9-month checkup, the South Carolina outbreak had exploded into the nation鈥檚 worst in more than 35 years, surpassing last year鈥檚 in Texas. That meant that under state guidance, Arthur could get his first dose of the MMR vaccine 鈥 for measles, mumps and rubella 鈥 earlier than the usual 12 to 15 months old. (Shastri and Ungar, 4/10)
Influenza vaccination may help protect against heart attack and stroke even when it does not prevent people from getting the flu, according to a new聽study published in Eurosurveillance. (Bergeson, 4/9)