October 7, 2025

The American vaccine panel no longer recommends JAB COVID-19 to adults

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Getty Images A health practitioner wearing white gloves transfers the COVVI-19 vaccine from a syringe bottleGetty images

The advisory committee for immunization practices makes recommendations on the use of vaccinations in the United States

A key advisory committee for American vaccines has voted to recommend that all adults get the COVVI-19 vaccine, which has so far been officially approved for most of the Americans each year from the pandemic.

The Consultative Committee on Vaccination Practices (ACIP) has also narrowly voted against the defense of prescriptions for the cocovid vaccine.

In two days of meetings, the AIPI changed its recommendations on the combined vaccine of measles, mumps, rubella, chickenpox (MMRV) and delayed plans for a vote on the vaccine against hepatitis B.

The Secretary of Health, Robert F Kennedy Jr, skeptical of the vaccine, dismissed the 17 members of the Committee in June and sorted their successors on the side, causing a tumult in the medical community.

The panel spent on Friday to discuss the COVVI-19 vaccine, which has been a routine recommendation for several years, as the annual flu.

The AIPI voted to abandon large support to recommend JAB, including for high -risk populations like people over the age of 65.

Instead, he decided that they could make their own decision after talking with a health professional.

In May, the federal government has ceased to recommend COVVI-19 vaccines for healthy women and pregnant children.

Friday, in an exchange, the ally of Kennedy, Dr. Robert Malone, argued that there was no evidence that the cocvid vaccine prevented a serious infection.

Dr Cody Meissner, once part of the Food and Drug Administration vaccines, argued that there are “fairly well defined” data that JAB protects against infection.

There was confusion during the debate on the MMRV – measles, mump, mumps and rubella and chickenpox vaccine (commonly known as chickenpox).

Thursday, the panel voted against the recommendation of the MMRV shooting combined for children aged four and under.

But Friday, they decided to approve two separate shots – a handset for measles, mumps and rubella, and another for chickenpox.

The American Medical Association, which represents doctors and medical students, said that new MMRV recommendations “leave confused parents”.

Getty Images The Secretary of Health Robert F Kennedy sat in front of a microphone in the American Senate, wearing a blue suit.Getty images

The United States Secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, has questioned the safety and efficiency of a number of vaccines

The panel also delayed a vote on the question of whether the newborns whose mothers have tested negative for hepatitis B during pregnancy should automatically receive a blow for the liver virus.

The AIPI has questioned the hepatitis B vaccine for months, even if scientists say that it is safe and effective in preventing infection.

In June, the new president of the panel, Dr. Martin Kulldorff, wondered if he was “wise” to give the hepatitis B vaccine to newborns.

The CDC said children receive the hepatitis B vaccine at birth since 1991.

Since then, the number of cases of potentially fatal disease has decreased in people aged 19 and under, which experts and CDC have attributed the implementation of the hepatitis B vaccine.

The posture of Robert F Kennedy Jr on vaccinations has been under surveillance since its entry into office in January.

Kennedy revised the CDC during his mandate. He replaced the members of the Vaccines Advisory Committee in June and dismissed his chief Susan Monarez at the end of August, causing a group of senior executives to resign.

Dr. Monarrez told the Senate on Wednesday that she had been dismissed for refusing to sign the changes in the vaccine policy “” independently of scientific evidence “.

Earlier this month, Kennedy said he rejected Dr. Monarez because he thought their interactions have shown that she was not trustworthy.

Doctors and health experts have criticized the long -standing issue by the Secretary of Health on the Safety and Effectiveness of a certain number of vaccines, although during his confirmation audience of the Senate, he said that he “was not going to take them”.


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