logo
US axes mRNA vaccine contracts, casting safety doubts

US axes mRNA vaccine contracts, casting safety doubts

News.com.au3 days ago
President Donald Trump's administration on Tuesday announced it would terminate 22 federal contracts for mRNA-based vaccines, questioning the safety of a technology credited with helping end the Covid pandemic and saving millions of lives.
The announcement, made by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., marks his latest effort to weave vaccine skepticism into the core of US government policy.
"We reviewed the science, listened to the experts, and acted," Kennedy said in a statement.
The health department's Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) is "terminating 22 mRNA vaccine development investments because the data show these vaccines fail to protect effectively against upper respiratory infections like COVID and flu," he added.
"We're shifting that funding toward safer, broader vaccine platforms that remain effective even as viruses mutate."
The changes affect Moderna's mRNA bird flu vaccine -- a move the company itself disclosed in May -- as well as numerous other programs, including "rejection or cancellation of multiple pre-award solicitations" from pharmaceutical giants Pfizer and Sanofi.
In total, the affected projects are worth "nearly $500 million," the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said. Certain late-stage projects were excluded from the move "to preserve prior taxpayer investment."
"Let me be absolutely clear: HHS supports safe, effective vaccines for every American who wants them," Secretary Kennedy said.
"That's why we're moving beyond the limitations of mRNA and investing in better solutions."
Since taking office, Kennedy, who spent two decades sowing misinformation around immunization, has overseen a major overhaul of US health policy -- firing, for example, a panel of vaccine experts that advise the government and replacing them with his own appointees.
In its first meeting, the new panel promptly voted to ban a longstanding vaccine preservative targeted by the anti-vaccine movement, despite its strong safety record.
He has also ordered a sweeping new study on the long-debunked link between vaccines and autism.
Unlike traditional vaccines, which often use weakened or inactivated forms of the target virus or bacteria, mRNA shots deliver genetic instructions into the host's cells, prompting them to produce a harmless decoy of the pathogen and train the immune system to fight the real thing.
Though in development for decades, mRNA vaccines were propelled from lab benches to widespread use through President Trump's Operation Warp Speed -- a public-private partnership led by BARDA that poured billions into companies to accelerate development.
The technology's pioneers, Katalin Kariko and Drew Weissman, were awarded the 2023 Nobel Prize in Medicine for their work contributing "to the unprecedented rate of vaccine development during one of the greatest threats to human health in modern times."
ia/jgc
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Working from home hinders unique in-person collaboration, despite the 'fun' of zany zoom backgrounds and muted mics
Working from home hinders unique in-person collaboration, despite the 'fun' of zany zoom backgrounds and muted mics

Sky News AU

time2 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

Working from home hinders unique in-person collaboration, despite the 'fun' of zany zoom backgrounds and muted mics

The critics of Jacinta Allan's monstrous idea that there should be a right to work two days a week from home are getting distracted. They're attacking it on economic modelling or legal principles. Correct, but wrong. The true reason this idea should be fought with the intensity of 300 Spartans is because working from home is, and always has been, awful. I thought Australians agreed to leave everything we did in Covid behind in a group-enforced amnesia, but somehow 'working from home' has endured. We live in an age where we are both obsessed with maintaining a work/life balance, and also finding new ways to bring our work into the areas we devote to life. I'm not blind to the benefits. I am writing this article from home, outside my office hours. I'm currently wearing gym shorts and a winter coat for some reason, and whenever I want to procrastinate I can flick my television back over to Fox Footy. When I was working from home during Covid, I managed to both perform my work duties and lead Wycombe Wanderers to Premier League glory in the 2036 season while playing the 'Football Manager' video game. But today I can also acknowledge that if I were in the Sky News offices writing this article, I would be done by now. And the reason for that is simple - I am a human being, a social animal. Thousands of years of genetics has made me both crave and thrive within social settings - for example, a building containing people I know and share common ground with may be able to help me with information I need, and give me a chance to demonstrate value by sharing information with them. Coworkers, we might call them. An active environment makes me active. Instead I am in my living room not having said a word for hours, only reminded that an outside world exists every time my phone pings. But of course, this is where working from home advocates will refer to their substitution for person-to-person contact: the Zoom call. Yes, this game changing invention that finally answered the question we all had - how can I have all of my coworkers in my house at the same time? Now the person that you may delay going to the staff kitchen to avoid seeing is in your guest bedroom, and he's not impressed by your furniture. My wife's coworkers spend an hour a day in a room that, when friends come over, we don't include in the house tour. But Zoom calls are fun. Sometimes someone forgets to turn their microphone on - hilarious! - and sometimes someone comes in with a zany background - interesting! - but these classic moments don't come close to group conversations and the relationships forged by in-person connections. And those relationships are key, especially for young workers looking to establish themselves. What is better for someone starting out their professional journey - the coffee break in your kitchen, or the coffee break at the cafe with seasoned coworkers who can let the new person know how things 'really work' around the office? What about the first Friday night drink - in front of a television at home or in front of higher ups at the office giving you a chance to form a good reputation in front of them? Forget young workers. Which of those sound more meaningful for workers at any stage of their career? When we're all just an icon on Slack or Teams, it's hard to form any actual connections. The working from home revolution is often seen as workers reclaiming rights over their conditions from greedy corporate bosses, who would rather whip them into soulless concrete mausoleums so they can more effectively rule over them with an iron fist. But those same mausoleums help workers too. We aren't supposed to live in self-imposed silos, connecting with each other through pings and whoops and buzzes. We're supposed to talk, connect, share and impart face to face - it's literally what our genetics push us to do. That's why Jacinta Allan's idea must fail. Yes it's bad for the economy, yes it's legally unsound. But deeper than that is our society is running towards this concept of working that makes living less meaningful - just like how delivery apps are making nights out obsolete, or what dating apps are doing to spontaneous conversation. Technology's ability to provide immediate convenience is lulling people into thinking that it's a preferable lifestyle. Our phones, laptops and televisions are Soma pills the government didn't even need to manufacture. At the risk of accidentally plagarising the Unabomber's manifesto, we're letting technology drive us away from our natural state. So log off of Zoom, turn off Netflix and get back to the office and talk to someone. James Bolt is a contributor

Daughter wants ‘answers' on Hogan's death
Daughter wants ‘answers' on Hogan's death

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Daughter wants ‘answers' on Hogan's death

Brooke Hogan is continuing to spread doubt about her late father Hulk Hogan's death. Just two days after insisting that the wrestling legend's chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) diagnosis was 'weird,' the 37-year-old told her Instagram followers why she found this health update so 'shocking'. She explained, 'I don't think anyone thinks there's foul play suspected, but the man had a very complicated medical history,' the New York Po st reports. Hulk Hogan died last month aged 75 in Tampa, Florida. Brooke claimed on Thursday to have seen 'MULTIPLE near-perfect blood panels' before 'all of a sudden everything [was] different'. She claimed, 'Anyone would want answers'. In a separate post to her Story, Brooke added, 'With all of the speculation and uncertainty of my dad's death, I want to personally offer to pay for an autopsy if that's what it takes to get it done. My dad's dignity and legacy deserves it'. The former reality star initially 'freaked out' when she was told Hulk had been 'cremated without an autopsy' after his July 24 passing at age 71. 'He has not been cremated, and [his wife, Sky Daily], is doing the research,' Brooke clarified. She first sparked conspiracy theories while calling into the Bubba the Love Sponge radio show Tuesday. 'Being through all the surgeries, you have to do a blood panel before any major surgery,' Brooke said. 'How did nobody catch a high white blood count? That's what bothers me the most. 'We don't have cancer that runs in our family,' she continued. 'It seems weird.' Brooke was mostly 'puzzled' over Hulk's leukaemia diagnosis because 'he took the most care of his body' and 'was going to an anti-ageing specialist'. Brooke, who asked to be removed from the athlete's will and skipped his funeral on Tuesday, noted, 'One doctor, I quote, said, 'His blood is like a 25-year-old''. A report from the Pinellas County Forensic Science Centre, in Tampa, revealed Hulk's cancer battle last week, as well as his cause of death — acute myocardial infarction, commonly known as a heart attack. In addition to Brooke and Daily, whom Hulk married in 2023, he is survived by his 35-year-old son, Nick Hogan, with ex-wife Linda Hogan.

‘Extremists': Trump offical's South Park rage
‘Extremists': Trump offical's South Park rage

News.com.au

time5 hours ago

  • News.com.au

‘Extremists': Trump offical's South Park rage

One of the Trump officials targeted by South Park in its ongoing brutal take-down of the White House has hit back saying the creators are 'petty' and 'lazy'. US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has blasted the 'liberals and extremists' and accused them of 'making fun of women'. In its new season South Park, created by Trey Parker and Matt Stone, has gone to town on the Trump administration. In multiple episodes it has portrayed the US president as having tiny genitalia and being the whiny boyfriend of an exasperated Satan. South Park has also now focused on Ms Noem who has spent a lot of time in her role donning a flak jacket and blue police cap as she joins officers on immigration raids. The raids have been lauded by Trump supporters as rounding up illegal immigrants but criticised by other for being cruel and sweeping up law abiding US residents. In episode two of the new season, in her flak jacket and cap, she raids at Dora the Explorer concert hauling away Dora and arrest anyone vaguely Hispanic. She also continually shoots dogs – in a reference to the time the real Ms Noem shot her family's dog in a gravel pit after she grew tired of its behaviour. Her face also droops and falls off in an unkind nod top her plastic surgery and Botox. Speaking to podcaster Glenn Beck on Thursday, US time, Ms Noem criticised the episode but admitted she hadn't seen the episode in question. 'It never ends. But it's so lazy to constantly make fun of women for how they look. 'Only the liberals and the extremists do that. 'If they wanted to criticise my job, go ahead and do that, but clearly they can't,' she added. 'They just pick something petty like that.' Yes, the show did poke fun at her plastic surgery. But her portrayal was mostly about how she dies her job. Rather than just letting South Park, a show which has famously skewered just about everyone, slide, the Trump administration has been pushing back on its new series. Which, of course, has just made it seem like the White House is thin skinned and has keep the show in the headline and likely rating. 'This show hasn't been relevant for over 20 years and is hanging on by a thread with uninspired ideas in a desperate attempt for attention,' a White House spokesman raged after the first episode featuring Mr Trump. After last week's second episode, which also featured JD Vance, the vice president tweeted an image of himself from the show and tweeted 'Well, I've finally mead it'. The South Park account retweeted the image with the caption 'Wait, so we ARE relevant'' and then added the hashtag 'eat a bag of d****s'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store