Federal Vaccine Panel in Disarray After Judge Blocks Changes
The judge ruled that HHS Secretary Kennedy's replacement of most advisory panel members lacked required federal procedures, suspending vaccine schedule votes amid ongoing legal challenges.
- On Monday, U.S. District Judge Murphy temporarily blocked HHS's overhaul and ruled that Kennedy's June replacements did not follow legal procedures.
- A December memorandum from President Donald Trump prompted an HHS and CDC review that led to January vaccine schedule revisions, which prompted a lawsuit in July.
- Judge Murphy noted that of the fifteen ACIP members, only six have vaccine experience, and Kennedy's appointees include Malone, who posted about disbanding the committee, then retracted the claim.
- The judge suspended ACIP votes and the panel postponed its scheduled meeting this week, while plaintiffs challenged the appointment of 14 ACIP members who may remain during appeals.
- HHS pushed back publicly, with spokesperson Andrew Nixon calling outside assertions 'baseless speculation' and saying HHS looks forward to the judge's decision being overturned.
18 Articles
18 Articles
U.S. District Court Issues Preliminary Injunction Against RFK, HHS For Its Vaccine Schedule Changes
It was mere days ago that we were discussing an interesting lawsuit brought by the American Academy of Pediatrics, among others, challenging RFK Jr. and HHS for violating the Administrative Procedures Act in making changes to the CDC’s ACIP panel and immunization schedules. If you’re not up on what the APA is and does, the text of the law reads: To the extent necessary to decision and when presented, the reviewing court shall decide all relevan…
Judge halts RFK’s childhood vaccine cuts
A federal judge this week temporarily blocked federal health officials from cutting the number of vaccines recommended for every child, and said U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. likely violated federal procedures in revamping a key vaccine advisory committee.The decision halted an order by Kennedy — announced in January — to end broad recommendations for all children to be vaccinated against flu, rotavirus, hepatitis A, hepatitis B, s…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 74% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium










