RFK Jr.'s Vaccine Shake-Up: Transparency or Trouble Ahead?

RFK Jr.'s Vaccine Shake-Up: Transparency or Trouble Ahead?

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. BioSnap a weekly updated Biography. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been at the center of a public health and political maelstrom in the past few days. As Secretary of Health and Human Services, Kennedy continues to make headlines after appointing five new members to his handpicked vaccine advisory panel only days ahead of a critical meeting where the committee will vote on sweeping changes to the national vaccine schedule, according to Axios. Several of these freshly appointed panelists, such as Kirk Milhoan and Catherine Stein, have previously faced accusations of spreading COVID-19 misinformation or strongly opposing vaccine mandates—a fact that has amplified accusations of an anti-vaccine agenda. This reshuffling came after Kennedy dismissed all 17 original members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices back in June—a move that left public health experts alarmed about the future of vaccine policy in the U.S. Nature reports that the now heavily scrutinized panel will meet on September 18 and 19 with COVID-19, hepatitis B, and MMR vaccines all on the table. Insiders say the committee is expected to recommend, for the first time in over thirty years, delaying the hepatitis B vaccine for children until age four—an extraordinary break from established best practices, as pediatricians and former CDC officials warn such a move could open the door for more children to contract this potentially fatal virus. KFF Health News and NPR confirm the unusually opaque process: there was no traditional working group, and the public only saw the agenda days before the vote, increasing suspicions around the transparency and motives driving these changes. Social media and the press have erupted with criticism. Multiple politicians, led by Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, called for Kennedy to be removed from office following his bumbling performance at the September 4 Senate Finance Committee hearing on the President’s 2026 Health Care Agenda, as reported by The Daily Campus. Kennedy dodged questions about the number of American COVID-19 deaths and refused to affirm whether vaccines had saved lives—despite government data clearly indicating their effectiveness. Warren accused Kennedy of reneging on his past pledges to protect vaccine access for all Americans, a charge seemingly bolstered by Kennedy’s August 27 move restricting COVID shots solely to adults over 65 and vulnerable groups. Controversy flared further when Kennedy fired CDC Director Susan Monarez after bluntly describing her as untrustworthy, a firing he claimed was necessary to restore CDC credibility—a claim widely panned as political posturing. The Washington Post ignited another firestorm by reporting that health officials may try to link the COVID vaccine to the deaths of 25 children, though public health data experts emphasize the cited database cannot establish causality. On social media, Kennedy and HHS official accounts have promoted the new appointments a

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