As expected, anti-vaccine Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has significantly rewritten the charter for a federal vaccine advisory panel. The edits give him more power to appoint his like-minded allies as federal advisors, shift the panel's focus to alleged vaccine injuries and risks, and welcome fringe groups and anti-vaccine organizations to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
On Monday, a notice in the Federal Register indicated Kennedy renewed the charter for the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), which is done every two years, with the last term having ended April 1. But instead of the usual humdrum renewal process, the notice on Monday indicated big changes were coming to the defining document of the panel, which heavily influences federal vaccine policy that, in turn, influences state requirements and insurance coverage.
The new charter, published Thursday, reveals new responsibilities that redirect advisors toward topics and terms dear to anti-vaccine activists. For instance, ACIP members will now be responsible for "considering analysis of cumulative effects of vaccines and their constituent components." This wording echoes explicit goals of Kennedy's anti-vaccine allies, who aim to pin complex conditions—such as allergies, autism, and neurodevelopmental conditions—on combinations of vaccinations or common ingredients in those shots, such as aluminum adjuvants. This is a pivot from anti-vaccine activists' earlier attacks that focused on individual vaccines, such as the false, fraudulent claim that the measles vaccine is linked to autism—a claim that has been roundly debunked by dozens of high-quality studies.
The charter now explicitly tasks ACIP with monitoring mRNA vaccines, which have always been in ACIP's purview, but are particularly reviled by Kennedy and those in his sphere. Kennedy once falsely claimed the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine was "the deadliest vaccine ever made."
Concerning changes
Among other changes, ACIP is now charged with "reviewing vaccination schedules by other countries and international organizations. This follows Kennedy's unilateral decision at the beginning of the year to dramatically slash the CDC's childhood vaccine schedule to match the oddly narrow schedule in Denmark, a small country with a relatively homogenous population and universal healthcare.
As for ACIP members themselves, the edited charter vastly broadens the requirements for serving as an advisor. In the previous charter, members needed to be "knowledgeable in the fields of immunization practices and public health." But now they can be knowledgeable in a variety of fields, including one as expansive as "medicine." Despite that wide-ranging category, the new charter identifies other fields, including toxicology, pediatric neurodevelopment, and one listed as "recovery from serious vaccine injuries."
These broadened categories follow a court defeat that temporarily blocked Kennedy's ACIP appointees for lacking relevant expertise to serve on the panel. Kennedy had removed the 17 expert advisors on ACIP last year and replaced them with hand-selected allies that largely share his anti-vaccine views. With the new requirements, Kennedy will likely have little problem installing more advisors of his choosing.
Last, the charter lists 33 non-voting liaisons for ACIP, including standard members like the American Medical Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics. But now it also includes fringe and alarming organizations. Those include: the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, a politically conservative organization that spreads medical misinformation and conspiracy theories, such as HIV/AIDS denialism; the Independent Medical Alliance (formerly Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance), which pushed the false COVID-19 treatments hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin amid the pandemic; the Medical Academy of Pediatrics and Special Needs, which supports the false claim that vaccines cause autism; and Physicians for Informed Consent, an anti-vaccine organization.