ATLANTA 鈥 U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.鈥檚 new advisory panel on vaccines started their inaugural meeting on Wednesday, amid close observation from medical professionals concerned about the availability of critical vaccines for Americans.
The meeting began with a complicated issue: Kennedy has already made public the decision to stop recommending COVID-19 vaccinations for healthy children and pregnant women. Curiously, his panel will not be casting votes on this stance. Meanwhile, government researchers have submitted materials highlighting vaccination as 鈥渢he best protection鈥 during pregnancy, noting that the majority of children who were hospitalized with COVID-19 in the last year had not received the vaccine.
COVID-19 continues to pose a significant public health risk, resulting in between 32,000 and 51,000 deaths, and over 250,000 hospitalizations in the U.S. since last fall, as per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Those most susceptible to needing hospitalization are the elderly and children under the age of two, particularly babies younger than six months, who might gain some immunity if their mothers are vaccinated during their pregnancy, according to the CDC鈥檚 findings.
It鈥檚 one signal that this week鈥檚 two-day meeting of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices isn鈥檛 business as usual.
Another sign: Shortly before the meeting, a Virginia-based obstetrician and gynecologist stepped down from the committee, bringing the panel鈥檚 number to just seven. The Trump administration said Dr. Michael Ross withdrew during a customary review of members鈥 financial holdings.
The meeting opened as the American Academy of Pediatrics announced that it will continue publishing its own vaccine schedule for children but now will do so independently of the ACIP, calling it 鈥渘o longer a credible process.鈥
The panel, created more than 60 years ago, helps the CDC determine who should be vaccinated against a long list of diseases, and when. Those recommendations have a big impact on whether insurance covers vaccinations and where they鈥檙e available, such as at pharmacies.
Earlier this month, Kennedy abruptly dismissed the existing 17-member expert panel and handpicked eight replacements, including several anti-vaccine voices. And a number of the CDC鈥檚 top vaccine scientists 鈥 including some who lead the reporting of data and the vetting of presentations at ACIP meetings 鈥 have resigned or been moved out of previous positions.
The highly unusual moves prompted a last-minute plea from a prominent Republican senator to delay this week鈥檚 meeting. Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, a physician who chairs the chamber鈥檚 health committee, said Monday that many of Kennedy鈥檚 chosen panelists lack the required expertise and 鈥渕ay even have a preconceived bias鈥 against new vaccine technologies.
In a House hearing Tuesday, Kennedy defended his purge, saying the old panel had been 鈥渁 template for medical malpractice.鈥
Rep. Kim Schrier, a pediatrician and Democrat from Washington state, told Kennedy: 鈥淚 will lay all responsibility for every death from a vaccine-preventable illness at your feet.鈥
Committee will vote on RSV protections
The two-day meeting鈥檚 agenda on was abruptly changed last week.
Discussion of COVID-19 shots will open the session on Wednesday. Later in the day, the committee will take up RSV, with votes expected. On Thursday, the committee will vote on fall flu vaccinations and on the use of a preservative in certain flu shots.
RSV, or respiratory syncytial virus, is a common cause of cold-like symptoms that can be dangerous for infants.
In 2023, U.S. health officials began recommending two new measures to protect infants 鈥 a lab-made antibody for newborns and a vaccine for pregnant women 鈥 that experts say likely drove an improvement in infant mortality.
The committee will discuss another company鈥檚 newly approved antibody shot, but the exact language for the vote was not released prior to the meeting.
鈥淚 think there may be a theme of soft-pedaling or withdrawing recommendations for healthy pregnant women and healthy children,鈥 even though they are at risk from vaccine-preventable diseases, said Lawrence Gostin, a public health law expert at Georgetown University who co-authored a recent medical journal commentary criticizing the COVID-19 vaccination decision.
Flu shot recommendations to be debated
At its June meetings, the committee usually refreshes guidance for Americans 6 month and older to get a flu shot, and helps greenlight the annual fall vaccination campaign.
But given the recent changes to the committee and federal public health leadership, it鈥檚 unclear how routine topics will be treated, said Jason Schwartz, a Yale University health policy researcher who has studied the committee.
Thursday also promises controversy. The advisory panel is set to consider a preservative in a subset of flu shots that Kennedy and some antivaccine groups have falsely contended is tied to autism. In preparation, the CDC posted a new report confirming that research shows no link between the preservative, thimerosal, and autism or any other neurodevelopmental disorders.
Gostin said the agenda appears to be 鈥渁 combination of what we would normally expect ACIP to cover along with a mixture of potential conspiracy theories,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e clearly are in a new normal that鈥檚 highly skeptical of vaccine science.鈥
The committee鈥檚 recommendations traditionally go to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director. Historically, nearly all are accepted and then used by insurance companies in deciding what vaccines to cover.
But the CDC currently has no director, so the committee鈥檚 recommendations have been going to Kennedy, and he has yet to act on a couple recommendations ACIP made in April.
The CDC director nominee, Susan Monarez, is slated to go before a Senate committee on Wednesday.
Neergaard reported from Washington.
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