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$6M made at Hartford Healthcare's annual gala

$6M made at Hartford Healthcare's annual gala

Yahoo11-05-2025

HARTFORD, Conn. (WTNH) — Hartford Healthcare hosted their annual 'Black and Red Gala' Saturday night at the Bushnell Theater.
'Tonight is so tremendous, but this is really about bringing people together,' President & CEO of Hartford Healthcare Jeffrey Flaks said. 'It's about community, it's about celebrating Connecticut, it's about recognizing the amazing people working in healthcare, the amazing work they do.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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The Swedish epidemiologist and biostatistician teamed up with Oxford professor Dr. Sunetra Gupta and Stanford professor Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, now director of the National Institutes of Health, to write the October 2020 'Great Barrington Declaration,' which argued for fewer social distancing requirements for young, healthy people rather than broad lockdowns. That alliance carried on as Bhattacharya assumed his federal role. Kulldorff's name swirled in the early days of the second Trump administration as HHS officials discussed potential hires around the agencies and appointments to advisory panels, according to a personal familiar with the discussions who asked to remain anonymous because they were not authorized to speak with CNN. Kennedy also seemed to suggest in April that Kulldorff was part of the agency's effort to research the causes of autism. 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This new study, which was posted as a preprint — meaning it hadn't been scrutinized by outside experts or published in medical journal — compared death risks in 1.4 million Florida adults who received either the Pfizer or Moderna Covid vaccines in the year after vaccination. The study authors say that they found a higher risk of dying from any cause, and from heart-related causes, in Floridians who received Pfizer's Covid-19 vaccines than in those who received shots from Moderna and that this indicates the vaccines have different 'non-specific' effects. In an email, Levi said that nonspecific effects relate to 'health outcomes broader than and beyond the target virus,' such as deaths from any cause or heart-related deaths. But the study didn't compare death rates in the vaccinated groups with those in people who were unvaccinated. Other studies have found that Covid-19 contributed to excess deaths during the years of the pandemic and to heart-related deaths specifically. The study also didn't account for different dosages in the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, noted Dr. Peter Hotez, a pediatrician and infectious disease expert who is co-director of the Center for Vaccine Development at Texas Children's Hospital. Moderna's shots had a higher dose of mRNA than Pfizer's: 100 micrograms vs. about 30 micrograms. If the excess deaths were caused by Covid, greater protection from the Moderna vaccines might explain the higher death risk in the Pfizer-vaccinated group, Hotez said. When asked whether the different dosing of mRNA in the vaccines might account for the findings, Levi wrote, 'I think that the hypothesis that Moderna has protective effects against non-COVID deaths and even against cardiovascular deaths, while cannot be fully dismissed, is highly implausible, and not supported by evidence.' In fact, Hotez said, it is supported by evidence. Hotez said in an email that this kind of messaging 'cherry picks a weakly supported factoid, and blows it up until it defies reality but supports their false narrative, while simultaneously ignoring a mountain of counter evidence.' The study authors used the findings to try to sow doubt about the vaccines. In a social media post, Ladapo wrote, 'Did your doctor tell you that you might be more likely to die if you took Pfizer instead of Moderna? That's what we found in Florida, and other studies have shown similar results. The system is rotten and we need more honest scientists.' Although Malone made some key early innovations in mRNA and its potential use in drug therapies, the biochemist has argued in recent years that mRNA-based Covid-19 vaccines are risky and that drug regulators too rapidly authorized their use. In 2023, Malone told House representatives during an event on Covid-19 vaccine injury led by Georgia Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene that he believes mRNA shots can cause cancer, a claim that is not backed by peer-reviewed scientific literature and the FDAand the National Cancer Institute say there is no evidence of a link. Malone's criticisms extend beyond mRNA immunizations. In April, he suggested that a number of measles cases in the current outbreak were caused by the vaccines themselves – although the CDC says they are rare breakthrough cases due to community spread, not cases from shots. In December, he wrote that early polio shots caused cancer because of contamination with the simian 40 virus. The CDC has said that although that virus has caused cancer in some animals, there is no evidence that it caused human cancers. More recently, Malone served as a senior medical adviser to Independent Medical Alliance, formerly known as the Frontline COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance, a nonprofit that pushed back on vaccine requirements and touted unproven coronavirus treatments such as ivermectin. The group celebrated Malone's appointment to the panel Wednesday. Asked whether it had any input with HHS on the new ACIP members, IMA President and Chief Medical Officer Dr. Joseph Varon said in an email that the group 'regularly communicates with HHS on public health issues, including vaccine policy. While specifics aren't disclosed, it's part of their mission to guide such processes.' Of all the new appointees, Dr. Cody Meissner has the most vaccine expertise. He is a pediatric infectious disease expert at Dartmouth University who also has a long history of government service. He previously served on ACIP from 2008 to 2012 and served on the group of independent experts who advised the FDA on its vaccine decisions during the pandemic. He's also been a member of vaccine advisory boards, including for the American Academy of Pediatrics, and was the chair of the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program. He has co-authored dozens of studies and position statements on vaccines. During the pandemic, he co-authored an editorial in The Wall Street Journal with Dr. Marty Makary, who is now commissioner of the FDA, arguing against the use of masks for kids. He recently told Reuters that he supports Kennedy's decision not to recommend Covid-19 vaccines for pregnant women and healthy children. In a social media post, infectious disease expert Dr. Michael Mina called Meissner a 'rigorous scientist and has defended vaccines' and a 'terrific choice.' Meissner did not respond to CNN's request for comment for this story. Kennedy's post about Pagano notes that he's a board-certified emergency medicine physician with more than 40 years of experience, including service on hospital committees, and is a strong advocate for evidence-based medicine. He appears to be licensed in both California and Florida. In posts on a blog linked to the X account with his name, Pagano wrote in 2017 that it was a 'disappointment' that Republicans failed to repeal and replace Obamacare, and he advocated for 'transparent, cost-based pricing' in health care. Pebsworth is a registered nurse and has a doctorate in health services organization and policy. She has worked in health care for more than 45 years, according to a brief bio that Kennedy posted to X. She's a regional director for the National Association of Catholic Nurses. She has served as a consumer representative to the FDA's Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee, or VRBPAC, and on subcommittees for HHS's National Vaccine Advisory Committee, along with other federal and congressional appointments. She has been a board member of the National Vaccine Information Center, a group that says it 'is dedicated to preventing vaccine injuries and deaths through public education and advocating for informed consent protections in medical policies and public health laws.' Articles and videos on its website say that vaccine injuries are common while the benefits of immunizations are questionable, call for more study of vaccines on the childhood schedule and promote the false idea that vaccines cause autism. As part of that group, Pebsworth made 'Ask Nurse Vicky' videos talking about vaccine injuries and informed consent. In one of the videos, she shared that she believes her son was injured by vaccines he received during a routine doctor's visit when he was 15 months old. In 2009, disgraced British physician Andrew Wakefield introduced Pebsworth's son before he sang and played keyboards at an autism dinner. Wakefield helped cause a worldwide panic in 1998 after he published a study suggesting that vaccines cause autism, but many subsequent studies have disproven the link. He was stripped of his medical license in 2010. Wakefield called Pebsworth 'my great friend.' Pebsworth did not respond to CNN's request for comment. Kennedy listed Dr. Michael Ross as a clinical professor at George Washington University and Virginia Commonwealth University, although Ross is not currently employed at either institution. A VCU spokesperson told CNN that Ross was an affiliate faculty member with the School of Medicine's Inova Campus from 2006 to 2021, when the VCU and Inova partnership ended. A spokesperson for GWU said Ross began working at the university in 1979, but he has not had a faculty appointment there since 2017. His LinkedIn lists his work there ending in May 2025. The Virginia-based obstetrics and gynecology physician announced a month ago that he had joined Manta Pharma, a Maryland biotech firm focused on AI-based delivery of therapies for autoimmune diseases, diabetes, drug addiction and HIV/AIDS. Ross' other current employer, private equity group Havencrest Capital Management, describes him as a 'serial CEO' who has served on the boards of multiple private health care companies. On his LinkedIn page, Ross says that while CEO of a generic pharmaceutical company, he engineered the acquisition of a stem cell company 'and an investment in a vaccine company.' Ross previously served as president of CPL Inc., the North American division of Indian generic drugmaker Cadila Pharmaceutical, and was a board member of the Generic Pharmaceutical Association. Ross did not respond to a request for comment on the vaccine company investment and potential recusals while serving on ACIP. CNN's Andrew Kaczynski and Em Steck contributed to this report.

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