
Kennedy says US is pulling funding from global vaccine group Gavi
Gavi said in a statement Thursday that its 'utmost concern is the health and safety of children,' adding that any decision it makes on vaccines to buy is done in accordance with recommendations issued by WHO's expert vaccine group.
Some doctors in the United States criticized the decision. Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Center at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, said it was 'incredibly dangerous' and warned that defunding immunization would put millions of children at risk.
Gavi is a public-private partnership including WHO, UNICEF, the Gates Foundation and the World Bank, and it is estimated that the vaccination programs have saved 18 million lives. The United States has long been one of its biggest supporters; before President Donald Trump's re-election, the country had pledged $1 billion through 2030.
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In just under four minutes, Kennedy called on Gavi 'to justify the $8 billion America has provided in funding since 2001,' saying officials must 'consider the best science available, even when that science contradicts established paradigms.' Kennedy said until that happens, the U.S. won't contribute further to Gavi.
The health secretary zeroed in on the COVID-19 vaccine, which WHO, Gavi and other health authorities have recommended for pregnant women, saying they are at higher risk of severe disease. Kennedy called that a 'questionable' recommendation; his U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently stopped recommending it.
He also criticized Gavi for funding of a rollout a vaccine to prevent diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis in poorer countries, saying he'd seen research that concluded that young girls who got the vaccine were more likely to die from all other causes than children who weren't immunized.
Gavi said scientists had reviewed all available data, including any studies that raised concerns, and that the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine has 'played a key role in helping halve childhood mortality.'
Some observational studies have shown that vaccinated girls do have a higher death rate compared to unvaccinated children, but there is no evidence the deaths are caused by the vaccine. But Offit said the studies cited by Kennedy were not convincing and that research examining links between vaccinations and deaths did not prove a causal connection.
'There's no mechanism here which makes biological sense for why the (diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine) might result in more children dying,' Offit said.
Offit also called Kennedy's decision to withdraw support from Gavi 'incredibly short-sighted and selfish,' saying that it would put the U.S. at higher risk of disease outbreaks imported from elsewhere.
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'If you're talking about an 'America-first' stance, this is just not a very smart thing to do,' Offit said.
Kennedy's recorded speech to Gavi came on the same day that his reconstituted U.S. vaccine advisory panel met for the first time. He fired the previous 17-member panel this month and replaced it with a seven-member group that includes several vaccine skeptics.
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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