US vaccine advisory panel does not recommend COVID jabs for all

US vaccine advisory panel does not recommend COVID jabs for all

Not all US residents over the age of six should be vaccinated, according to a vaccine advisory panel appointed by Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy.

Since the COVID pandemic began to affect the world in 2020, the panel’s recommendations on Friday were different from those in the panel’s earlier recommendations.

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The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) had voted to require that all US residents over the age of six receive the most recent vaccine every year since the COVID vaccine became available in the US.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention must approve the most recent vote, which is only a recommendation. Despite this, there are concerns that the organization is reversing its commitment to scientifically supported vaccine legislation under Kennedy’s leadership, who, according to critics, has led to a rise in misinformation-fueled skepticism.

Former CDC Director Susan Monarez made a warning to a Senate Committee earlier this week about the agency’s continued political rigor and its backslide.

Despite the lack of any scientific justification, Monarez claims she was fired for rejecting ACIP’s recommendations. Shortly after taking over the advisory panel, Kennedy appointed some replacements who had been accused of disseminating false information.

There is a real risk that recommendations could be made to limit access to vaccines for children and others in need, according to what I observed while serving, according to Monarez.

The panel said the vaccine should be administered based on “shared clinical decision-making” with a doctor in the decision made on Friday. The panel narrowly avoided suggesting that the vaccine should be prescribed.

The panel also suggested that the CDC make more explicit recommendations regarding the risks associated with vaccination.

According to a number of medical organizations, introducing additional barriers to the vaccination program could lead to a decrease in infection rates and ultimately to the spread of the disease.

The American Academy of Pediatrics’ Dr. Sean O’Leary criticized the decision to not recommend vaccination as “extraordinarily vague” and claimed it would have “real-time effects on American children.”

He claimed that there were no “sow distrust” of vaccines during the discussion.

O’Leary remarked, “It was a very, very strange meeting.”

Despite persistent infection and death, CDC data currently demonstrates that COVID vaccines offer the best protection against severe infection and death. Because the virus is still evolving, people still run the risk of getting infected even after one has already been infected.

In the fall and winter of 2017, CDC data released in June revealed 32, 000 to 51, 000 US fatalities and more than 250, 000 hospitalizations. Seniors and young children who are not vaccinized are the most at risk for hospitalization.

ACIP’s attention was drawn to a rare side-effect of the vaccine, myocarditis, which has affected mostly younger men.

A scientist who studied whether people with particular genes were particularly susceptible informed the panel that the Trump administration had canceled his grant prior to the study’s conclusion.

In response to the pandemic, the panel’s attention has largely been focused on mRNA vaccines, an emerging technology essential to the rapid release of COVID vaccines.

Nearly all leading medical organizations have refrained from making repeated suggestions that such vaccines pose more risks than benefits.

Source: Aljazeera

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