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RFK Jr. to Meet Food Industry Chiefs Next Week, Politico Says

RFK Jr. to Meet Food Industry Chiefs Next Week, Politico Says

Bloomberg08-03-2025
US Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. plans to meet with top executives from major food firms on Monday, Politico reported Saturday.
Officials from General Mills Inc., maker of products such as Cheerios and Bisquick, and PepsiCo Inc., which produces beverages and snack foods, are among the expected participants of the meeting, Politico reported, citing people familiar with the matter who weren't identified.
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RFK Jr., CDC panel casting doubt on the hepatitis B vaccine. Here's why it's safe
RFK Jr., CDC panel casting doubt on the hepatitis B vaccine. Here's why it's safe

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

RFK Jr., CDC panel casting doubt on the hepatitis B vaccine. Here's why it's safe

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the members of his newly appointed vaccine panel are casting doubt on the hepatitis B vaccine and the established practice of vaccinating newborns. Last week, during the first meeting of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) since Kennedy removed all the previous sitting members and appointed seven new members, the chair questioned whether it was "wise" to administer shots "to every newborn before leaving the hospital." Martin Kulldorff, a former Harvard Medical School professor, said a new work group would discuss the practice. MORE: Experts warn RFK Jr. is unraveling the system that kept vaccines safe Additionally, Kennedy claimed, without evidence, earlier this week during an interview with Tucker Carlson, that the CDC conducted a study that found the hepatitis B vaccine increases the risk of autism, and that researchers hid the results of the study from the public. The HHS did not immediately respond to ABC News' request for the study that Kennedy referenced in his interview. An infectious disease expert told ABC News that there is no evidence to suggest the hepatitis B vaccine is unsafe and that vaccinating babies at birth has been key to virtually eliminating the virus among children. Hepatitis B is a liver infection caused by the hepatitis B virus, according to the CDC. The virus is transmitted from a person coming into contact with the blood, semen or other bodily fluid of someone who is infected. Newborns might be infected through the process of birth or from casual contact, because the virus can survive in the environment for about a week, Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious disease specialist at the University of California, San Francisco, told ABC News. Up to half of all older children, adolescents and adults have symptoms of acute hepatitis B. Most children younger than age 5, however, have no symptoms, the CDC said. "Hepatitis B … causes inflammation in the liver …and that inflammation leads to the liver not working well at all," Chin-Hong said. "So that's cirrhosis and liver failure and, ultimately, also liver cancer. The longer you have hepatitis B, the higher the risk of cirrhosis or liver failure and liver cancer." Acute hepatitis B infection, which is a short-term illness, can lead to a lifelong infection known as chronic hepatitis B, according to the CDC Chin-Hong said that means if somebody is born with hepatitis B or infected as a child, they have a high chance of liver failure or liver cancer as an adult. Chin-Hong said the best way for someone to prevent hepatitis B and to protect themselves is by getting vaccinated. The vaccine was first developed in the early 1980s. Depending on the vaccine brand, the hepatitis B vaccine is either a series of two or three shots, according to the CDC. MORE: RFK Jr. has questioned rising autism rates. Here's what experts say he gets wrong about the disorder The childhood immunization schedule recommends babies be vaccinated at birth with a second dose between one and two months old and a potential third dose from 6 months to 15 months old. "The more shots you get, the higher the chance the vaccine will take," Chin-Hong said. "If you get three shots, it's above 97% efficacy." In 1991, when the ACIP recommended universal vaccination for hepatitis B among infants to decrease transmission, there were 18,000 cases of hepatitis B in those under 10 years old in the U.S., according to the CDC. Since then, cases have dramatically decreased. CDC data shows that in 2022, the rate of cases among those ages 19 was less than 0.1 per 100,000. "It's very, very rare," Chin-Hong said. "So, we've had a big success, and the United States is a mirror for the rest of the world … 97% of countries now have a recommendation for hepatitis B vaccination in infants. It's really changed the face of not only infection and liver failure, but also liver cancer." During the ACIP meeting last week, Kulldorff implied that children receive too many vaccines nowadays compared to decades ago. "The number of vaccines that our children and adolescents receive today exceeds what children in most other developed nations receive and what most of us in this room received when we were children," Kulldorff said. Chin-Hong said that by adding vaccines to the immunization schedule, children have more protection against diseases compared to 10 or even 20 years ago, and the makeup of vaccines is also different. "The way that we're delivering the vaccines is very different," he said. "They're through smaller bits of the virus instead of the whole virus itself or bacteria. So, it means that infants are exposed to actually fewer antigens. or parts of the virus or bacteria, with better vaccines." The ACIP announcing that well-studied vaccines, like the hepatitis B vaccine, are going to be reanalyzed could make people think the initial approval process was unsafe, according to Chin-Hong. As for Kennedy's claim, the HHS secretary has been a long-time vaccine skeptic who refused to say during his confirmation hearings earlier this year that vaccines don't cause autism despite many high-quality studies finding no such link. "There's no evidence that the hepatitis B vaccine leads to autism or is a risk factor for autism, and that is unquestionable," Chin-Hong said. ABC News' Youri Benadjaoud contributed to this report.

RFK Jr., CDC panel have been casting doubt on the hepatitis B vaccine. Here's why it's safe

time5 hours ago

RFK Jr., CDC panel have been casting doubt on the hepatitis B vaccine. Here's why it's safe

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the members of his newly appointed vaccine panel are casting doubt on the hepatitis B vaccine and the established practice of vaccinating newborns. Last week, during the first meeting of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) since Kennedy removed all the previous sitting members and appointed seven new members, the chair questioned whether it was "wise" to administer shots "to every newborn before leaving the hospital." Martin Kulldorff, a former Harvard Medical School professor, said a new work group would discuss the practice. Additionally, Kennedy claimed, without evidence, earlier this week during an interview with Tucker Carlson, that the CDC conducted a study that found the hepatitis B vaccine increases the risk of autism, and that researchers hid the results of the study from the public. The HHS did not immediately respond to ABC News' request for the study that Kennedy referenced in his interview. An infectious disease expert told ABC News that there is no evidence to suggest the hepatitis B vaccine is unsafe and that vaccinating babies at birth has been key to virtually eliminating the virus among children. What is hepatitis B? Hepatitis B is a liver infection caused by the hepatitis B virus, according to the CDC. The virus is transmitted from a person coming into contact with the blood, semen or other bodily fluid of someone who is infected. Newborns might be infected through the process of birth or from casual contact, because the virus can survive in the environment for about a week, Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious disease specialist at the University of California, San Francisco, told ABC News. Up to half of all older children, adolescents and adults have symptoms of acute hepatitis B. Most children younger than age 5, however, have no symptoms, the CDC said. "Hepatitis B … causes inflammation in the liver …and that inflammation leads to the liver not working well at all," Chin-Hong said. "So that's cirrhosis and liver failure and, ultimately, also liver cancer. The longer you have hepatitis B, the higher the risk of cirrhosis or liver failure and liver cancer." Acute hepatitis B infection, which is a short-term illness, can lead to a lifelong infection known as chronic hepatitis B, according to the CDC Chin-Hong said that means if somebody is born with hepatitis B or infected as a child, they have a high chance of liver failure or liver cancer as an adult. Benefits of vaccination Chin-Hong said the best way for someone to prevent hepatitis B and to protect themselves is by getting vaccinated. The vaccine was first developed in the early 1980s. Depending on the vaccine brand, the hepatitis B vaccine is either a series of two or three shots, according to the CDC. The childhood immunization schedule recommends babies be vaccinated at birth with a second dose between one and two months old and a potential third dose from 6 months to 15 months old. "The more shots you get, the higher the chance the vaccine will take," Chin-Hong said. "If you get three shots, it's above 97% efficacy." In 1991, when the ACIP recommended universal vaccination for hepatitis B among infants to decrease transmission, there were 18,000 cases of hepatitis B in those under 10 years old in the U.S., according to the CDC. Since then, cases have dramatically decreased. CDC data shows that in 2022, the rate of cases among those ages 19 was less than 0.1 per 100,000. "It's very, very rare," Chin-Hong said. "So, we've had a big success, and the United States is a mirror for the rest of the world … 97% of countries now have a recommendation for hepatitis B vaccination in infants. It's really changed the face of not only infection and liver failure, but also liver cancer." Why hepatitis B vaccination is safe During the ACIP meeting last week, Kulldorff implied that children receive too many vaccines nowadays compared to decades ago. "The number of vaccines that our children and adolescents receive today exceeds what children in most other developed nations receive and what most of us in this room received when we were children," Kulldorff said. Chin-Hong said that by adding vaccines to the immunization schedule, children have more protection against diseases compared to 10 or even 20 years ago, and the makeup of vaccines is also different. "The way that we're delivering the vaccines is very different," he said. "They're through smaller bits of the virus instead of the whole virus itself or bacteria. So, it means that infants are exposed to actually fewer antigens. or parts of the virus or bacteria, with better vaccines." The ACIP announcing that well-studied vaccines, like the hepatitis B vaccine, are going to be reanalyzed could make people think the initial approval process was unsafe, according to Chin-Hong. As for Kennedy's claim, the HHS secretary has been a long-time vaccine skeptic who refused to say during his confirmation hearings earlier this year that vaccines don't cause autism despite many high-quality studies finding no such link. "There's no evidence that the hepatitis B vaccine leads to autism or is a risk factor for autism, and that is unquestionable," Chin-Hong said.

Letters to the Editor: Vaccines save millions of lives. Don't let Robert F. Kennedy Jr. diminish them
Letters to the Editor: Vaccines save millions of lives. Don't let Robert F. Kennedy Jr. diminish them

Los Angeles Times

time5 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Letters to the Editor: Vaccines save millions of lives. Don't let Robert F. Kennedy Jr. diminish them

To the editor: For Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to be our secretary of Health and Human Services is not only having the fox guard the chicken coop — the fox is invited right into the chicken coop. His unfitness for the job and danger to the health of our citizens was beautifully laid out by columnist Robin Abcarian in her article on the critical role of vaccines and the dangers we face because he belittles their validity and importance ('RFK Jr. is dismantling trust in vaccines, the crown jewel of American public health,' June 29). During my pediatric residency decades ago, some of the 'old-timers' occasionally brought in patients who had diseases that we rarely saw anymore because of vaccines, including measles. One night, a toddler came into the emergency room and we admitted her immediately to the intensive care unit because we could see she had a grave infection. She died the next day. The infection she had, Haemophilus influenzae type B, is now part of the vaccination schedule. That vaccine alone is estimated to have saved 2.85 million lives from 1989 to 2024. There is little that prevents infant mortality like vaccines. Even though the insurance industry has followed Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendations for vaccines, paying for the ones recommended by the CDC Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices, I recommend and hope they will pivot to following the recommendations of professional medical organizations such as the American Academy of Pediatrics. Our children and others receiving vaccines deserve this protection. Linda Randolph, Los Angeles .. To the editor: Operation Warp Speed was a great success that enabled testing and widespread distribution of COVID-19 vaccines by the end of the first pandemic year, 2020. According to one study, in just the first seven months of 2021, the vaccines saved approximately 279,000 U.S. lives. Now, as Abcarian discusses, we have a Health secretary who tells Americans to eat healthy while he feasts on junk science that erroneously claims that COVID vaccines, along with other vaccines, are harmful. We should all be concerned about our nation's transition from Operation Warp Speed to what I call 'Operation Warped Mind' — a foolish opposition to vaccines — and the risks that this poses to our health. And we should all question why the president nominated an unqualified person to be the Health secretary and why all Republican senators except Mitch McConnell voted to confirm him. It's notable that McConnell, a survivor of childhood polio, explained his position by saying, 'I will not condone the relitigation of proven cures, and neither will millions of Americans who credit their survival and quality of life to scientific miracles.' David Michels, Encino

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