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RSV vaccine access expanded to some people in their 50s, according to CDC website

RSV vaccine access expanded to some people in their 50s, according to CDC website

The Trump administration appears to be expanding RSV vaccinations to some adults starting at age 50, down from 60, following the advice of a recently fired panel of government vaccine advisers.
The decision appears on a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention webpage but as of Wednesday wasn't on the agency's official adult immunization schedule.
RSV, or respiratory syncytial virus, typically is a coldlike nuisance, but it can be severe, even life-threatening, for infants and older adults. The CDC recommends vaccination for certain pregnant women and a onetime shot for everyone 75 or older. But people as young as 60 with health problems that increase their risk can also get it.
In April, the CDC's influential Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommended expanding RSV vaccination to high-risk adults as young as 50, too. But the CDC lacks a director to decide whether to adopt that recommendation and Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. didn't immediately act.
Last month, Kennedy fired all 17 members of that panel and handpicked seven replacements that include several vaccine skeptics.
The new panel alarmed doctors' groups last week by ignoring settled science on a rarely used flu vaccine preservative and by announcing a probe of the children's vaccine schedule. It didn't revisit RSV vaccination for older adults.
Kennedy already had taken the unusual step of changing COVID-19 vaccine recommendations without consulting the committee.
On Wednesday, a page on CDC's website said that on June 25, Kennedy had adopted the ousted panel's recommendation to expand RSV vaccination to high-risk 50-somethings and it is 'now an official recommendation of the CDC.'
That move was first reported by Endpoints News.
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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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Is VISP an independent administrator? Here's what some documents say
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Is VISP an independent administrator? Here's what some documents say

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‘Nothing Was Ready': Inside Canada's Vaccine Injury Support Program
‘Nothing Was Ready': Inside Canada's Vaccine Injury Support Program

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‘Nothing Was Ready': Inside Canada's Vaccine Injury Support Program

A $50-million program the federal government created to help Canadians seriously injured by COVID-19 vaccines is in disarray, current and former staffers say. The Vaccine Injury Support Program (VISP), created during the pandemic, was designed to compensate people who have been seriously and permanently injured by any Health Canada-authorized vaccine administered in Canada on or after Dec. 8, 2020. The Public Health Agency of Canada subsequently selected a consulting firm, Oxaro Inc., to administer the program. The Ottawa-based company vowed it had the 'people, processes, and tools' to run the initiative with 'industry best practices.' 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Claims managers with more experience were eventually hired, but at least three quit, according to their colleagues. Among the employee frustrations, there was also no clear roadmap for managing a claim. Five current and former workers told Global News that policies and procedures were incomplete. Others bemoaned a lack of training. 'They (VISP) had no idea what they were doing,' one former worker said. 'Nothing was ready. We were still being designed two years after the contract was awarded.' 'They were building the program as they went,' another said. The Public Health Agency of Canada did write a policy framework for VISP, but it was up to Oxaro to design and implement it, according to PHAC documents. It wasn't properly fleshed out, former workers said. Advertisement 'I asked for the policy language we would use to decide cases,' one said. 'There was none.' As a result, another worker said they relied on 'word of mouth' to figure out how to handle claims. 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'I think they (injured claimants) were merely names on paper and nothing more than that.' View image in full screen People who say they have been hurt by vaccines must complete an application form before their claim can be evaluated. PHAC Those injured claimants said the treatment from VISP workers 'lacked humanity.' Advertisement One injured woman, whose case was eventually approved, said she was brought to tears when her claims manager shouted at her and swore, 'You're just after free money.' That same VISP case manager allegedly told a second injured person: 'You didn't have to get the vaccine.' He was later fired, according to former workers. Several workers said that despite the team's inexperience and limited resources, they still tried their hardest to provide support payments to those in need. View image in full screen VISP has approved 219 cases. More than 3,000 people have applied. 'I did everything I could for that program. I couldn't do any more,' one former worker said. 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