The recommendations counter the CDC’s guidance for children and expose doctors to vaccine injury liability.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., responded to the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) issuing infant vaccination guidelines this week that differed from those released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The group recommended COVID-19 vaccinations for all children aged 6 months to 23 months, which is the opposite of updates from the CDC in the spring.
Secretary Kennedy stated, “AAP is angry that CDC has eliminated corporate influence in decisions over vaccine recommendations and returned CDC to gold-standard science and evidence-based medicine laser-focused on children’s health.”
The HHS secretary shared a screenshot from the AAP’s website that thanks its “top corporate donors,“ which include vaccine makers Merck, Moderna, Pfizer, and Sanofi.
Secretary Kennedy continued, “AAP… released its own list of corporate-friendly vaccine recommendations. The Trump Administration believes in free speech and AAP has a right to make its case to the American people. But AAP should follow the lead of HHS and disclose conflicts of interest, including its corporate entanglements and those of its journal—Pediatrics—so that Americans may ask whether the AAP’s recommendations reflect public health interest, or are, perhaps, just a pay-to-play scheme to promote commercial ambitions of AAP’s Big Pharma benefactors.”
Secretary Kennedy concluded, “AAP should also be candid with doctors and hospitals that recommendations that diverge from the CDC’s official list are not shielded from liability under the 1986 Vaccine Injury Act.”
As the Lord Leads, Pray with Us…
- For Secretary Kennedy as he seeks to ensure that children and pregnant women and their babies are not injured by the COVID-19 vaccine.
- For Director Susan Monarez to seek God’s wisdom as she heads the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Sources: The Wall Street Journal, MSN, PJ Media, Politico