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RFK jnr is stoking fears about vaccines. He's wrong

RFK jnr is stoking fears about vaccines. He's wrong

The Advertiser7 hours ago

The United States used to be a leader in vaccine research, development and policymaking. Now US Secretary of Health Robert F. Kennedy jnr is undermining the country's vaccine program at the highest level and supercharging vaccine skepticism.
Two weeks ago, RFK jnr sacked the entire Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices responsible for reviewing the latest scientific evidence on vaccines. RFK Jr alleged conflicts of interest and hand-picked a replacement panel.
On Wednesday, RFK jnr announced the US would stop funding the global vaccine alliance, Gavi, because he claimed that "when the science was inconvenient today, Gavi ignored the science". RFK jnr questioned the safety of COVID vaccines for pregnant women, as well as the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine.
On Thursday, when the new Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices met, the person who first drew RFK jnr into vaccine scepticism, Lyn Redwood, shared disproved claims about a chemical called thimerosal in flu vaccines being harmful.
The undermining of regulation, advisory processes and funding changes will have global impacts, as debunked claims are given new levels of apparent legitimacy. Some of these impacts will be slow and insidious.
So what should we make of these latest claims and funding cuts?
Thiomersal (thimerosal in the the US) is a safe and effective preservative that prevents bacterial and fungal contamination of the vaccine contained in a multi-dose vial. It's a salt that contains a tiny amount of mercury in a safe form.
Thiomersal is no longer used as a preservative in any vaccines routinely given in Australia. But it's still used in the Q fever vaccine.
Other countries use multi-dose vials with thiomersal when single-dose vials are too expensive.
In the US, just 4 per cent of adult influenza vaccines contain thiomersal. So focusing on removing vaccines containing thimerosal is a distraction for the committee.
On Wednesday, RFK jnr criticised Gavi's encouragement of pregnant women to receive COVID-19 vaccines.
A COVID-19 infection before and during pregnancy can increase the risk of miscarriage two- to four-fold, even if it's only a mild infection.
Conversely, there is good evidence vaccination during pregnancy is safe and can reduce the chance of hospitalisation of pregnant people and of infants by passing antibodies through the placenta.
In Australia, pregnant people who have never received a primary COVID-19 vaccine are recommended to have one. However, they are not generally recommended to have booster unless they have underlying risk conditions or prefer to have one. This is due to population immunity.
COVID-19 vaccine advice should adapt to changes in disease risk and vaccine benefit. It doesn't mean previous decisions were wrong, nor that vaccine boosters are unsafe.
RFK jnr's criticism of COVID-19 vaccines in pregnancy may influence choices individuals make in other countries, even when unvaccinated pregnant women are encouraged to consider vaccination.
RFK jnr also questioned the safety of the combined diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTP) vaccine as he announced the withdrawal of US funding support for Gavi.
In the early 2000s, three community-based observational studies reported a possible association between increased chance of death in infants and use of the DTP vaccine.
A few subsequent studies also reported associations, with higher risk in girls, prompting a World Health Organisation (WHO) review of safety.
Real-world studies are complicated, and the data can be difficult to interpret correctly. Often, the very factors that influence whether someone gets vaccinated can also be associated with other health risks.
When the WHO committee reviewed all the studies on DTP safety in 2014, it did not indicate serious adverse events. It concluded there was substantial evidence against these claims.
Gavi, the vaccine alliance, supports vaccine purchasing in low-income countries.
The US has historically accounted for 13 per cent of all donor funds.
However, RFK jnr said Gavi needed to re-earn the public trust and "consider the best science available" before the US would contribute funding again.
Gavi predicted in March that the impact of US funding cuts could result in one million deaths through missed vaccines.
Australia is fortunate to be buffered from these impacts.
Our vaccine advisory body, the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation, has people with deep expertise in vaccination. We have robust decision processes that weigh evidence critically and make careful recommendations to government.
The federal government also announced A$386 million to support the work of Gavi from 2026 to 2030.
All of this keeps our vaccine policies strong, preventing disease and increasing life expectancy here and overseas.
But to mitigate the possible influence of the US in Australia, our governments, health professionals and the public need to be ready to rapidly tackle the misinformation, distortions and half-truths RFK jnr cleverly packages - with quality information.
The United States used to be a leader in vaccine research, development and policymaking. Now US Secretary of Health Robert F. Kennedy jnr is undermining the country's vaccine program at the highest level and supercharging vaccine skepticism.
Two weeks ago, RFK jnr sacked the entire Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices responsible for reviewing the latest scientific evidence on vaccines. RFK Jr alleged conflicts of interest and hand-picked a replacement panel.
On Wednesday, RFK jnr announced the US would stop funding the global vaccine alliance, Gavi, because he claimed that "when the science was inconvenient today, Gavi ignored the science". RFK jnr questioned the safety of COVID vaccines for pregnant women, as well as the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine.
On Thursday, when the new Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices met, the person who first drew RFK jnr into vaccine scepticism, Lyn Redwood, shared disproved claims about a chemical called thimerosal in flu vaccines being harmful.
The undermining of regulation, advisory processes and funding changes will have global impacts, as debunked claims are given new levels of apparent legitimacy. Some of these impacts will be slow and insidious.
So what should we make of these latest claims and funding cuts?
Thiomersal (thimerosal in the the US) is a safe and effective preservative that prevents bacterial and fungal contamination of the vaccine contained in a multi-dose vial. It's a salt that contains a tiny amount of mercury in a safe form.
Thiomersal is no longer used as a preservative in any vaccines routinely given in Australia. But it's still used in the Q fever vaccine.
Other countries use multi-dose vials with thiomersal when single-dose vials are too expensive.
In the US, just 4 per cent of adult influenza vaccines contain thiomersal. So focusing on removing vaccines containing thimerosal is a distraction for the committee.
On Wednesday, RFK jnr criticised Gavi's encouragement of pregnant women to receive COVID-19 vaccines.
A COVID-19 infection before and during pregnancy can increase the risk of miscarriage two- to four-fold, even if it's only a mild infection.
Conversely, there is good evidence vaccination during pregnancy is safe and can reduce the chance of hospitalisation of pregnant people and of infants by passing antibodies through the placenta.
In Australia, pregnant people who have never received a primary COVID-19 vaccine are recommended to have one. However, they are not generally recommended to have booster unless they have underlying risk conditions or prefer to have one. This is due to population immunity.
COVID-19 vaccine advice should adapt to changes in disease risk and vaccine benefit. It doesn't mean previous decisions were wrong, nor that vaccine boosters are unsafe.
RFK jnr's criticism of COVID-19 vaccines in pregnancy may influence choices individuals make in other countries, even when unvaccinated pregnant women are encouraged to consider vaccination.
RFK jnr also questioned the safety of the combined diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTP) vaccine as he announced the withdrawal of US funding support for Gavi.
In the early 2000s, three community-based observational studies reported a possible association between increased chance of death in infants and use of the DTP vaccine.
A few subsequent studies also reported associations, with higher risk in girls, prompting a World Health Organisation (WHO) review of safety.
Real-world studies are complicated, and the data can be difficult to interpret correctly. Often, the very factors that influence whether someone gets vaccinated can also be associated with other health risks.
When the WHO committee reviewed all the studies on DTP safety in 2014, it did not indicate serious adverse events. It concluded there was substantial evidence against these claims.
Gavi, the vaccine alliance, supports vaccine purchasing in low-income countries.
The US has historically accounted for 13 per cent of all donor funds.
However, RFK jnr said Gavi needed to re-earn the public trust and "consider the best science available" before the US would contribute funding again.
Gavi predicted in March that the impact of US funding cuts could result in one million deaths through missed vaccines.
Australia is fortunate to be buffered from these impacts.
Our vaccine advisory body, the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation, has people with deep expertise in vaccination. We have robust decision processes that weigh evidence critically and make careful recommendations to government.
The federal government also announced A$386 million to support the work of Gavi from 2026 to 2030.
All of this keeps our vaccine policies strong, preventing disease and increasing life expectancy here and overseas.
But to mitigate the possible influence of the US in Australia, our governments, health professionals and the public need to be ready to rapidly tackle the misinformation, distortions and half-truths RFK jnr cleverly packages - with quality information.
The United States used to be a leader in vaccine research, development and policymaking. Now US Secretary of Health Robert F. Kennedy jnr is undermining the country's vaccine program at the highest level and supercharging vaccine skepticism.
Two weeks ago, RFK jnr sacked the entire Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices responsible for reviewing the latest scientific evidence on vaccines. RFK Jr alleged conflicts of interest and hand-picked a replacement panel.
On Wednesday, RFK jnr announced the US would stop funding the global vaccine alliance, Gavi, because he claimed that "when the science was inconvenient today, Gavi ignored the science". RFK jnr questioned the safety of COVID vaccines for pregnant women, as well as the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine.
On Thursday, when the new Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices met, the person who first drew RFK jnr into vaccine scepticism, Lyn Redwood, shared disproved claims about a chemical called thimerosal in flu vaccines being harmful.
The undermining of regulation, advisory processes and funding changes will have global impacts, as debunked claims are given new levels of apparent legitimacy. Some of these impacts will be slow and insidious.
So what should we make of these latest claims and funding cuts?
Thiomersal (thimerosal in the the US) is a safe and effective preservative that prevents bacterial and fungal contamination of the vaccine contained in a multi-dose vial. It's a salt that contains a tiny amount of mercury in a safe form.
Thiomersal is no longer used as a preservative in any vaccines routinely given in Australia. But it's still used in the Q fever vaccine.
Other countries use multi-dose vials with thiomersal when single-dose vials are too expensive.
In the US, just 4 per cent of adult influenza vaccines contain thiomersal. So focusing on removing vaccines containing thimerosal is a distraction for the committee.
On Wednesday, RFK jnr criticised Gavi's encouragement of pregnant women to receive COVID-19 vaccines.
A COVID-19 infection before and during pregnancy can increase the risk of miscarriage two- to four-fold, even if it's only a mild infection.
Conversely, there is good evidence vaccination during pregnancy is safe and can reduce the chance of hospitalisation of pregnant people and of infants by passing antibodies through the placenta.
In Australia, pregnant people who have never received a primary COVID-19 vaccine are recommended to have one. However, they are not generally recommended to have booster unless they have underlying risk conditions or prefer to have one. This is due to population immunity.
COVID-19 vaccine advice should adapt to changes in disease risk and vaccine benefit. It doesn't mean previous decisions were wrong, nor that vaccine boosters are unsafe.
RFK jnr's criticism of COVID-19 vaccines in pregnancy may influence choices individuals make in other countries, even when unvaccinated pregnant women are encouraged to consider vaccination.
RFK jnr also questioned the safety of the combined diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTP) vaccine as he announced the withdrawal of US funding support for Gavi.
In the early 2000s, three community-based observational studies reported a possible association between increased chance of death in infants and use of the DTP vaccine.
A few subsequent studies also reported associations, with higher risk in girls, prompting a World Health Organisation (WHO) review of safety.
Real-world studies are complicated, and the data can be difficult to interpret correctly. Often, the very factors that influence whether someone gets vaccinated can also be associated with other health risks.
When the WHO committee reviewed all the studies on DTP safety in 2014, it did not indicate serious adverse events. It concluded there was substantial evidence against these claims.
Gavi, the vaccine alliance, supports vaccine purchasing in low-income countries.
The US has historically accounted for 13 per cent of all donor funds.
However, RFK jnr said Gavi needed to re-earn the public trust and "consider the best science available" before the US would contribute funding again.
Gavi predicted in March that the impact of US funding cuts could result in one million deaths through missed vaccines.
Australia is fortunate to be buffered from these impacts.
Our vaccine advisory body, the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation, has people with deep expertise in vaccination. We have robust decision processes that weigh evidence critically and make careful recommendations to government.
The federal government also announced A$386 million to support the work of Gavi from 2026 to 2030.
All of this keeps our vaccine policies strong, preventing disease and increasing life expectancy here and overseas.
But to mitigate the possible influence of the US in Australia, our governments, health professionals and the public need to be ready to rapidly tackle the misinformation, distortions and half-truths RFK jnr cleverly packages - with quality information.
The United States used to be a leader in vaccine research, development and policymaking. Now US Secretary of Health Robert F. Kennedy jnr is undermining the country's vaccine program at the highest level and supercharging vaccine skepticism.
Two weeks ago, RFK jnr sacked the entire Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices responsible for reviewing the latest scientific evidence on vaccines. RFK Jr alleged conflicts of interest and hand-picked a replacement panel.
On Wednesday, RFK jnr announced the US would stop funding the global vaccine alliance, Gavi, because he claimed that "when the science was inconvenient today, Gavi ignored the science". RFK jnr questioned the safety of COVID vaccines for pregnant women, as well as the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine.
On Thursday, when the new Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices met, the person who first drew RFK jnr into vaccine scepticism, Lyn Redwood, shared disproved claims about a chemical called thimerosal in flu vaccines being harmful.
The undermining of regulation, advisory processes and funding changes will have global impacts, as debunked claims are given new levels of apparent legitimacy. Some of these impacts will be slow and insidious.
So what should we make of these latest claims and funding cuts?
Thiomersal (thimerosal in the the US) is a safe and effective preservative that prevents bacterial and fungal contamination of the vaccine contained in a multi-dose vial. It's a salt that contains a tiny amount of mercury in a safe form.
Thiomersal is no longer used as a preservative in any vaccines routinely given in Australia. But it's still used in the Q fever vaccine.
Other countries use multi-dose vials with thiomersal when single-dose vials are too expensive.
In the US, just 4 per cent of adult influenza vaccines contain thiomersal. So focusing on removing vaccines containing thimerosal is a distraction for the committee.
On Wednesday, RFK jnr criticised Gavi's encouragement of pregnant women to receive COVID-19 vaccines.
A COVID-19 infection before and during pregnancy can increase the risk of miscarriage two- to four-fold, even if it's only a mild infection.
Conversely, there is good evidence vaccination during pregnancy is safe and can reduce the chance of hospitalisation of pregnant people and of infants by passing antibodies through the placenta.
In Australia, pregnant people who have never received a primary COVID-19 vaccine are recommended to have one. However, they are not generally recommended to have booster unless they have underlying risk conditions or prefer to have one. This is due to population immunity.
COVID-19 vaccine advice should adapt to changes in disease risk and vaccine benefit. It doesn't mean previous decisions were wrong, nor that vaccine boosters are unsafe.
RFK jnr's criticism of COVID-19 vaccines in pregnancy may influence choices individuals make in other countries, even when unvaccinated pregnant women are encouraged to consider vaccination.
RFK jnr also questioned the safety of the combined diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTP) vaccine as he announced the withdrawal of US funding support for Gavi.
In the early 2000s, three community-based observational studies reported a possible association between increased chance of death in infants and use of the DTP vaccine.
A few subsequent studies also reported associations, with higher risk in girls, prompting a World Health Organisation (WHO) review of safety.
Real-world studies are complicated, and the data can be difficult to interpret correctly. Often, the very factors that influence whether someone gets vaccinated can also be associated with other health risks.
When the WHO committee reviewed all the studies on DTP safety in 2014, it did not indicate serious adverse events. It concluded there was substantial evidence against these claims.
Gavi, the vaccine alliance, supports vaccine purchasing in low-income countries.
The US has historically accounted for 13 per cent of all donor funds.
However, RFK jnr said Gavi needed to re-earn the public trust and "consider the best science available" before the US would contribute funding again.
Gavi predicted in March that the impact of US funding cuts could result in one million deaths through missed vaccines.
Australia is fortunate to be buffered from these impacts.
Our vaccine advisory body, the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation, has people with deep expertise in vaccination. We have robust decision processes that weigh evidence critically and make careful recommendations to government.
The federal government also announced A$386 million to support the work of Gavi from 2026 to 2030.
All of this keeps our vaccine policies strong, preventing disease and increasing life expectancy here and overseas.
But to mitigate the possible influence of the US in Australia, our governments, health professionals and the public need to be ready to rapidly tackle the misinformation, distortions and half-truths RFK jnr cleverly packages - with quality information.

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RFK jnr is stoking fears about vaccines. He's wrong
RFK jnr is stoking fears about vaccines. He's wrong

The Advertiser

time7 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

RFK jnr is stoking fears about vaccines. He's wrong

The United States used to be a leader in vaccine research, development and policymaking. Now US Secretary of Health Robert F. Kennedy jnr is undermining the country's vaccine program at the highest level and supercharging vaccine skepticism. Two weeks ago, RFK jnr sacked the entire Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices responsible for reviewing the latest scientific evidence on vaccines. RFK Jr alleged conflicts of interest and hand-picked a replacement panel. On Wednesday, RFK jnr announced the US would stop funding the global vaccine alliance, Gavi, because he claimed that "when the science was inconvenient today, Gavi ignored the science". RFK jnr questioned the safety of COVID vaccines for pregnant women, as well as the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine. On Thursday, when the new Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices met, the person who first drew RFK jnr into vaccine scepticism, Lyn Redwood, shared disproved claims about a chemical called thimerosal in flu vaccines being harmful. The undermining of regulation, advisory processes and funding changes will have global impacts, as debunked claims are given new levels of apparent legitimacy. Some of these impacts will be slow and insidious. So what should we make of these latest claims and funding cuts? Thiomersal (thimerosal in the the US) is a safe and effective preservative that prevents bacterial and fungal contamination of the vaccine contained in a multi-dose vial. It's a salt that contains a tiny amount of mercury in a safe form. Thiomersal is no longer used as a preservative in any vaccines routinely given in Australia. But it's still used in the Q fever vaccine. Other countries use multi-dose vials with thiomersal when single-dose vials are too expensive. In the US, just 4 per cent of adult influenza vaccines contain thiomersal. So focusing on removing vaccines containing thimerosal is a distraction for the committee. On Wednesday, RFK jnr criticised Gavi's encouragement of pregnant women to receive COVID-19 vaccines. A COVID-19 infection before and during pregnancy can increase the risk of miscarriage two- to four-fold, even if it's only a mild infection. Conversely, there is good evidence vaccination during pregnancy is safe and can reduce the chance of hospitalisation of pregnant people and of infants by passing antibodies through the placenta. In Australia, pregnant people who have never received a primary COVID-19 vaccine are recommended to have one. However, they are not generally recommended to have booster unless they have underlying risk conditions or prefer to have one. This is due to population immunity. COVID-19 vaccine advice should adapt to changes in disease risk and vaccine benefit. It doesn't mean previous decisions were wrong, nor that vaccine boosters are unsafe. RFK jnr's criticism of COVID-19 vaccines in pregnancy may influence choices individuals make in other countries, even when unvaccinated pregnant women are encouraged to consider vaccination. RFK jnr also questioned the safety of the combined diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTP) vaccine as he announced the withdrawal of US funding support for Gavi. In the early 2000s, three community-based observational studies reported a possible association between increased chance of death in infants and use of the DTP vaccine. A few subsequent studies also reported associations, with higher risk in girls, prompting a World Health Organisation (WHO) review of safety. Real-world studies are complicated, and the data can be difficult to interpret correctly. Often, the very factors that influence whether someone gets vaccinated can also be associated with other health risks. When the WHO committee reviewed all the studies on DTP safety in 2014, it did not indicate serious adverse events. It concluded there was substantial evidence against these claims. Gavi, the vaccine alliance, supports vaccine purchasing in low-income countries. The US has historically accounted for 13 per cent of all donor funds. However, RFK jnr said Gavi needed to re-earn the public trust and "consider the best science available" before the US would contribute funding again. Gavi predicted in March that the impact of US funding cuts could result in one million deaths through missed vaccines. Australia is fortunate to be buffered from these impacts. Our vaccine advisory body, the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation, has people with deep expertise in vaccination. We have robust decision processes that weigh evidence critically and make careful recommendations to government. The federal government also announced A$386 million to support the work of Gavi from 2026 to 2030. All of this keeps our vaccine policies strong, preventing disease and increasing life expectancy here and overseas. But to mitigate the possible influence of the US in Australia, our governments, health professionals and the public need to be ready to rapidly tackle the misinformation, distortions and half-truths RFK jnr cleverly packages - with quality information. The United States used to be a leader in vaccine research, development and policymaking. Now US Secretary of Health Robert F. Kennedy jnr is undermining the country's vaccine program at the highest level and supercharging vaccine skepticism. Two weeks ago, RFK jnr sacked the entire Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices responsible for reviewing the latest scientific evidence on vaccines. RFK Jr alleged conflicts of interest and hand-picked a replacement panel. On Wednesday, RFK jnr announced the US would stop funding the global vaccine alliance, Gavi, because he claimed that "when the science was inconvenient today, Gavi ignored the science". RFK jnr questioned the safety of COVID vaccines for pregnant women, as well as the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine. On Thursday, when the new Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices met, the person who first drew RFK jnr into vaccine scepticism, Lyn Redwood, shared disproved claims about a chemical called thimerosal in flu vaccines being harmful. The undermining of regulation, advisory processes and funding changes will have global impacts, as debunked claims are given new levels of apparent legitimacy. Some of these impacts will be slow and insidious. So what should we make of these latest claims and funding cuts? Thiomersal (thimerosal in the the US) is a safe and effective preservative that prevents bacterial and fungal contamination of the vaccine contained in a multi-dose vial. It's a salt that contains a tiny amount of mercury in a safe form. Thiomersal is no longer used as a preservative in any vaccines routinely given in Australia. But it's still used in the Q fever vaccine. Other countries use multi-dose vials with thiomersal when single-dose vials are too expensive. In the US, just 4 per cent of adult influenza vaccines contain thiomersal. So focusing on removing vaccines containing thimerosal is a distraction for the committee. On Wednesday, RFK jnr criticised Gavi's encouragement of pregnant women to receive COVID-19 vaccines. A COVID-19 infection before and during pregnancy can increase the risk of miscarriage two- to four-fold, even if it's only a mild infection. Conversely, there is good evidence vaccination during pregnancy is safe and can reduce the chance of hospitalisation of pregnant people and of infants by passing antibodies through the placenta. In Australia, pregnant people who have never received a primary COVID-19 vaccine are recommended to have one. However, they are not generally recommended to have booster unless they have underlying risk conditions or prefer to have one. This is due to population immunity. COVID-19 vaccine advice should adapt to changes in disease risk and vaccine benefit. It doesn't mean previous decisions were wrong, nor that vaccine boosters are unsafe. RFK jnr's criticism of COVID-19 vaccines in pregnancy may influence choices individuals make in other countries, even when unvaccinated pregnant women are encouraged to consider vaccination. RFK jnr also questioned the safety of the combined diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTP) vaccine as he announced the withdrawal of US funding support for Gavi. In the early 2000s, three community-based observational studies reported a possible association between increased chance of death in infants and use of the DTP vaccine. A few subsequent studies also reported associations, with higher risk in girls, prompting a World Health Organisation (WHO) review of safety. Real-world studies are complicated, and the data can be difficult to interpret correctly. Often, the very factors that influence whether someone gets vaccinated can also be associated with other health risks. When the WHO committee reviewed all the studies on DTP safety in 2014, it did not indicate serious adverse events. It concluded there was substantial evidence against these claims. Gavi, the vaccine alliance, supports vaccine purchasing in low-income countries. The US has historically accounted for 13 per cent of all donor funds. However, RFK jnr said Gavi needed to re-earn the public trust and "consider the best science available" before the US would contribute funding again. Gavi predicted in March that the impact of US funding cuts could result in one million deaths through missed vaccines. Australia is fortunate to be buffered from these impacts. Our vaccine advisory body, the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation, has people with deep expertise in vaccination. We have robust decision processes that weigh evidence critically and make careful recommendations to government. The federal government also announced A$386 million to support the work of Gavi from 2026 to 2030. All of this keeps our vaccine policies strong, preventing disease and increasing life expectancy here and overseas. But to mitigate the possible influence of the US in Australia, our governments, health professionals and the public need to be ready to rapidly tackle the misinformation, distortions and half-truths RFK jnr cleverly packages - with quality information. The United States used to be a leader in vaccine research, development and policymaking. Now US Secretary of Health Robert F. Kennedy jnr is undermining the country's vaccine program at the highest level and supercharging vaccine skepticism. Two weeks ago, RFK jnr sacked the entire Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices responsible for reviewing the latest scientific evidence on vaccines. RFK Jr alleged conflicts of interest and hand-picked a replacement panel. On Wednesday, RFK jnr announced the US would stop funding the global vaccine alliance, Gavi, because he claimed that "when the science was inconvenient today, Gavi ignored the science". RFK jnr questioned the safety of COVID vaccines for pregnant women, as well as the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine. On Thursday, when the new Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices met, the person who first drew RFK jnr into vaccine scepticism, Lyn Redwood, shared disproved claims about a chemical called thimerosal in flu vaccines being harmful. The undermining of regulation, advisory processes and funding changes will have global impacts, as debunked claims are given new levels of apparent legitimacy. Some of these impacts will be slow and insidious. So what should we make of these latest claims and funding cuts? Thiomersal (thimerosal in the the US) is a safe and effective preservative that prevents bacterial and fungal contamination of the vaccine contained in a multi-dose vial. It's a salt that contains a tiny amount of mercury in a safe form. Thiomersal is no longer used as a preservative in any vaccines routinely given in Australia. But it's still used in the Q fever vaccine. Other countries use multi-dose vials with thiomersal when single-dose vials are too expensive. In the US, just 4 per cent of adult influenza vaccines contain thiomersal. So focusing on removing vaccines containing thimerosal is a distraction for the committee. On Wednesday, RFK jnr criticised Gavi's encouragement of pregnant women to receive COVID-19 vaccines. A COVID-19 infection before and during pregnancy can increase the risk of miscarriage two- to four-fold, even if it's only a mild infection. Conversely, there is good evidence vaccination during pregnancy is safe and can reduce the chance of hospitalisation of pregnant people and of infants by passing antibodies through the placenta. In Australia, pregnant people who have never received a primary COVID-19 vaccine are recommended to have one. However, they are not generally recommended to have booster unless they have underlying risk conditions or prefer to have one. This is due to population immunity. COVID-19 vaccine advice should adapt to changes in disease risk and vaccine benefit. It doesn't mean previous decisions were wrong, nor that vaccine boosters are unsafe. RFK jnr's criticism of COVID-19 vaccines in pregnancy may influence choices individuals make in other countries, even when unvaccinated pregnant women are encouraged to consider vaccination. RFK jnr also questioned the safety of the combined diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTP) vaccine as he announced the withdrawal of US funding support for Gavi. In the early 2000s, three community-based observational studies reported a possible association between increased chance of death in infants and use of the DTP vaccine. A few subsequent studies also reported associations, with higher risk in girls, prompting a World Health Organisation (WHO) review of safety. Real-world studies are complicated, and the data can be difficult to interpret correctly. Often, the very factors that influence whether someone gets vaccinated can also be associated with other health risks. When the WHO committee reviewed all the studies on DTP safety in 2014, it did not indicate serious adverse events. It concluded there was substantial evidence against these claims. Gavi, the vaccine alliance, supports vaccine purchasing in low-income countries. The US has historically accounted for 13 per cent of all donor funds. However, RFK jnr said Gavi needed to re-earn the public trust and "consider the best science available" before the US would contribute funding again. Gavi predicted in March that the impact of US funding cuts could result in one million deaths through missed vaccines. Australia is fortunate to be buffered from these impacts. Our vaccine advisory body, the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation, has people with deep expertise in vaccination. We have robust decision processes that weigh evidence critically and make careful recommendations to government. The federal government also announced A$386 million to support the work of Gavi from 2026 to 2030. All of this keeps our vaccine policies strong, preventing disease and increasing life expectancy here and overseas. But to mitigate the possible influence of the US in Australia, our governments, health professionals and the public need to be ready to rapidly tackle the misinformation, distortions and half-truths RFK jnr cleverly packages - with quality information. The United States used to be a leader in vaccine research, development and policymaking. Now US Secretary of Health Robert F. Kennedy jnr is undermining the country's vaccine program at the highest level and supercharging vaccine skepticism. Two weeks ago, RFK jnr sacked the entire Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices responsible for reviewing the latest scientific evidence on vaccines. RFK Jr alleged conflicts of interest and hand-picked a replacement panel. On Wednesday, RFK jnr announced the US would stop funding the global vaccine alliance, Gavi, because he claimed that "when the science was inconvenient today, Gavi ignored the science". RFK jnr questioned the safety of COVID vaccines for pregnant women, as well as the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine. On Thursday, when the new Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices met, the person who first drew RFK jnr into vaccine scepticism, Lyn Redwood, shared disproved claims about a chemical called thimerosal in flu vaccines being harmful. The undermining of regulation, advisory processes and funding changes will have global impacts, as debunked claims are given new levels of apparent legitimacy. Some of these impacts will be slow and insidious. So what should we make of these latest claims and funding cuts? Thiomersal (thimerosal in the the US) is a safe and effective preservative that prevents bacterial and fungal contamination of the vaccine contained in a multi-dose vial. It's a salt that contains a tiny amount of mercury in a safe form. Thiomersal is no longer used as a preservative in any vaccines routinely given in Australia. But it's still used in the Q fever vaccine. Other countries use multi-dose vials with thiomersal when single-dose vials are too expensive. In the US, just 4 per cent of adult influenza vaccines contain thiomersal. So focusing on removing vaccines containing thimerosal is a distraction for the committee. On Wednesday, RFK jnr criticised Gavi's encouragement of pregnant women to receive COVID-19 vaccines. A COVID-19 infection before and during pregnancy can increase the risk of miscarriage two- to four-fold, even if it's only a mild infection. Conversely, there is good evidence vaccination during pregnancy is safe and can reduce the chance of hospitalisation of pregnant people and of infants by passing antibodies through the placenta. In Australia, pregnant people who have never received a primary COVID-19 vaccine are recommended to have one. However, they are not generally recommended to have booster unless they have underlying risk conditions or prefer to have one. This is due to population immunity. COVID-19 vaccine advice should adapt to changes in disease risk and vaccine benefit. It doesn't mean previous decisions were wrong, nor that vaccine boosters are unsafe. RFK jnr's criticism of COVID-19 vaccines in pregnancy may influence choices individuals make in other countries, even when unvaccinated pregnant women are encouraged to consider vaccination. RFK jnr also questioned the safety of the combined diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTP) vaccine as he announced the withdrawal of US funding support for Gavi. In the early 2000s, three community-based observational studies reported a possible association between increased chance of death in infants and use of the DTP vaccine. A few subsequent studies also reported associations, with higher risk in girls, prompting a World Health Organisation (WHO) review of safety. Real-world studies are complicated, and the data can be difficult to interpret correctly. Often, the very factors that influence whether someone gets vaccinated can also be associated with other health risks. When the WHO committee reviewed all the studies on DTP safety in 2014, it did not indicate serious adverse events. It concluded there was substantial evidence against these claims. Gavi, the vaccine alliance, supports vaccine purchasing in low-income countries. The US has historically accounted for 13 per cent of all donor funds. However, RFK jnr said Gavi needed to re-earn the public trust and "consider the best science available" before the US would contribute funding again. Gavi predicted in March that the impact of US funding cuts could result in one million deaths through missed vaccines. Australia is fortunate to be buffered from these impacts. Our vaccine advisory body, the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation, has people with deep expertise in vaccination. We have robust decision processes that weigh evidence critically and make careful recommendations to government. The federal government also announced A$386 million to support the work of Gavi from 2026 to 2030. All of this keeps our vaccine policies strong, preventing disease and increasing life expectancy here and overseas. But to mitigate the possible influence of the US in Australia, our governments, health professionals and the public need to be ready to rapidly tackle the misinformation, distortions and half-truths RFK jnr cleverly packages - with quality information.

Alfredo spent 120 days in hospital because no nursing home would take him
Alfredo spent 120 days in hospital because no nursing home would take him

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Alfredo spent 120 days in hospital because no nursing home would take him

Alfredo de Andrade spent 120 days in Maitland Hospital as a severe dementia patient because no nursing home would take him. He'd shown high levels of agitation and aggression, so he was put on psychotropic medication to calm him. The Metford man, who died this month, had initially gone to Maitland Hospital for surgery after he fell and broke his hip. He was transferred to Kurri Kurri Hospital for recovery. "While he was there, he caught COVID," son Paulo de Andrade said. While at Kurri, Alfredo's aggressive behaviour meant he was transferred back to Maitland. "It was a concern that Dad was taking up an acute bed in a major hospital," Paulo said. "But he simply couldn't return home, and we couldn't find a place in a nursing home that could take care of him. "The hospital tried very hard to find a place for Dad. Eventually he did find a place at HammondCare's dementia village at Cardiff." He went into care at the village's eight-bed Quintral Cottage. It is part of the federal government's Special Dementia Care Program (SDCP) for patients with severe symptoms. There are 22 federally-funded SDCP units in Australia and 35 planned in total by 2026. Paulo said the family wanted Alfredo to "have the best quality of life possible in his remaining time". "The plan was to get him off the psychiatric medication, as he was in a safe environment," Paulo said. "As this was done, his aggression came down considerably." After about 12 months at Quintral, he was able to move into a regular cottage at Cardiff. "He became stable, could take instructions from the carers and was happy," Paulo said. Over-medicating elderly patients with dementia - so-called "chemical restraints" - is a controversial topic. Two recent royal commissions found psychotropic medicines were being "misused and overused", particularly among older people and those with a disability. Nonetheless, Paulo accepts that his dad was medicated at hospital for "his own safety". "I'm not saying it's wrong, it's the way it is," he said. "It's difficult for medical staff to get the medication mix right because every individual is different. They have to get a balance and see how they react." Paulo said the staff treating his dad at hospital were "magnificent". However, there were not enough publicly funded dementia places. "The public needs to be more aware of this because dementia cases are rising," he said. "There needs to be more public pressure on politicians for funding and resources for this." Alfredo migrated to Newcastle from Portugal in 1981, along with his wife Maria and their three children. He worked as a boilermaker at Allco Steel at Tomago. As a metal worker, he fabricated steel for projects such as the Australian Maritime Museum, Darling Harbour, Chifley Tower and the Sydney Monorail. "Dad was hard-working, kind and caring, who loved his family and friends," Paulo said. "He was brave to bring his family halfway around the world to start a new life." Paulo said it was hard seeing his dad go through severe dementia. "I'm thankful there are places that can take these patients and care for them safely. We need more of them." Federal aged care Minister Sam Rae more than 400,000 people were living with dementia in Australia. This was expected to "double by 2058". "We're working to deliver support that gives people with dementia the dignified care and quality of life they deserve," Mr Rae said. The government had allocated $57 million "to support older patients with dementia to transition out of hospital into aged care". Alfredo de Andrade spent 120 days in Maitland Hospital as a severe dementia patient because no nursing home would take him. He'd shown high levels of agitation and aggression, so he was put on psychotropic medication to calm him. The Metford man, who died this month, had initially gone to Maitland Hospital for surgery after he fell and broke his hip. He was transferred to Kurri Kurri Hospital for recovery. "While he was there, he caught COVID," son Paulo de Andrade said. While at Kurri, Alfredo's aggressive behaviour meant he was transferred back to Maitland. "It was a concern that Dad was taking up an acute bed in a major hospital," Paulo said. "But he simply couldn't return home, and we couldn't find a place in a nursing home that could take care of him. "The hospital tried very hard to find a place for Dad. Eventually he did find a place at HammondCare's dementia village at Cardiff." He went into care at the village's eight-bed Quintral Cottage. It is part of the federal government's Special Dementia Care Program (SDCP) for patients with severe symptoms. There are 22 federally-funded SDCP units in Australia and 35 planned in total by 2026. Paulo said the family wanted Alfredo to "have the best quality of life possible in his remaining time". "The plan was to get him off the psychiatric medication, as he was in a safe environment," Paulo said. "As this was done, his aggression came down considerably." After about 12 months at Quintral, he was able to move into a regular cottage at Cardiff. "He became stable, could take instructions from the carers and was happy," Paulo said. Over-medicating elderly patients with dementia - so-called "chemical restraints" - is a controversial topic. Two recent royal commissions found psychotropic medicines were being "misused and overused", particularly among older people and those with a disability. Nonetheless, Paulo accepts that his dad was medicated at hospital for "his own safety". "I'm not saying it's wrong, it's the way it is," he said. "It's difficult for medical staff to get the medication mix right because every individual is different. They have to get a balance and see how they react." Paulo said the staff treating his dad at hospital were "magnificent". However, there were not enough publicly funded dementia places. "The public needs to be more aware of this because dementia cases are rising," he said. "There needs to be more public pressure on politicians for funding and resources for this." Alfredo migrated to Newcastle from Portugal in 1981, along with his wife Maria and their three children. He worked as a boilermaker at Allco Steel at Tomago. As a metal worker, he fabricated steel for projects such as the Australian Maritime Museum, Darling Harbour, Chifley Tower and the Sydney Monorail. "Dad was hard-working, kind and caring, who loved his family and friends," Paulo said. "He was brave to bring his family halfway around the world to start a new life." Paulo said it was hard seeing his dad go through severe dementia. "I'm thankful there are places that can take these patients and care for them safely. We need more of them." Federal aged care Minister Sam Rae more than 400,000 people were living with dementia in Australia. This was expected to "double by 2058". "We're working to deliver support that gives people with dementia the dignified care and quality of life they deserve," Mr Rae said. The government had allocated $57 million "to support older patients with dementia to transition out of hospital into aged care". Alfredo de Andrade spent 120 days in Maitland Hospital as a severe dementia patient because no nursing home would take him. He'd shown high levels of agitation and aggression, so he was put on psychotropic medication to calm him. The Metford man, who died this month, had initially gone to Maitland Hospital for surgery after he fell and broke his hip. He was transferred to Kurri Kurri Hospital for recovery. "While he was there, he caught COVID," son Paulo de Andrade said. While at Kurri, Alfredo's aggressive behaviour meant he was transferred back to Maitland. "It was a concern that Dad was taking up an acute bed in a major hospital," Paulo said. "But he simply couldn't return home, and we couldn't find a place in a nursing home that could take care of him. "The hospital tried very hard to find a place for Dad. Eventually he did find a place at HammondCare's dementia village at Cardiff." He went into care at the village's eight-bed Quintral Cottage. It is part of the federal government's Special Dementia Care Program (SDCP) for patients with severe symptoms. There are 22 federally-funded SDCP units in Australia and 35 planned in total by 2026. Paulo said the family wanted Alfredo to "have the best quality of life possible in his remaining time". "The plan was to get him off the psychiatric medication, as he was in a safe environment," Paulo said. "As this was done, his aggression came down considerably." After about 12 months at Quintral, he was able to move into a regular cottage at Cardiff. "He became stable, could take instructions from the carers and was happy," Paulo said. Over-medicating elderly patients with dementia - so-called "chemical restraints" - is a controversial topic. Two recent royal commissions found psychotropic medicines were being "misused and overused", particularly among older people and those with a disability. Nonetheless, Paulo accepts that his dad was medicated at hospital for "his own safety". "I'm not saying it's wrong, it's the way it is," he said. "It's difficult for medical staff to get the medication mix right because every individual is different. They have to get a balance and see how they react." Paulo said the staff treating his dad at hospital were "magnificent". However, there were not enough publicly funded dementia places. "The public needs to be more aware of this because dementia cases are rising," he said. "There needs to be more public pressure on politicians for funding and resources for this." Alfredo migrated to Newcastle from Portugal in 1981, along with his wife Maria and their three children. He worked as a boilermaker at Allco Steel at Tomago. As a metal worker, he fabricated steel for projects such as the Australian Maritime Museum, Darling Harbour, Chifley Tower and the Sydney Monorail. "Dad was hard-working, kind and caring, who loved his family and friends," Paulo said. "He was brave to bring his family halfway around the world to start a new life." Paulo said it was hard seeing his dad go through severe dementia. "I'm thankful there are places that can take these patients and care for them safely. We need more of them." Federal aged care Minister Sam Rae more than 400,000 people were living with dementia in Australia. This was expected to "double by 2058". "We're working to deliver support that gives people with dementia the dignified care and quality of life they deserve," Mr Rae said. The government had allocated $57 million "to support older patients with dementia to transition out of hospital into aged care". Alfredo de Andrade spent 120 days in Maitland Hospital as a severe dementia patient because no nursing home would take him. He'd shown high levels of agitation and aggression, so he was put on psychotropic medication to calm him. The Metford man, who died this month, had initially gone to Maitland Hospital for surgery after he fell and broke his hip. He was transferred to Kurri Kurri Hospital for recovery. "While he was there, he caught COVID," son Paulo de Andrade said. While at Kurri, Alfredo's aggressive behaviour meant he was transferred back to Maitland. "It was a concern that Dad was taking up an acute bed in a major hospital," Paulo said. "But he simply couldn't return home, and we couldn't find a place in a nursing home that could take care of him. "The hospital tried very hard to find a place for Dad. Eventually he did find a place at HammondCare's dementia village at Cardiff." He went into care at the village's eight-bed Quintral Cottage. It is part of the federal government's Special Dementia Care Program (SDCP) for patients with severe symptoms. There are 22 federally-funded SDCP units in Australia and 35 planned in total by 2026. Paulo said the family wanted Alfredo to "have the best quality of life possible in his remaining time". "The plan was to get him off the psychiatric medication, as he was in a safe environment," Paulo said. "As this was done, his aggression came down considerably." After about 12 months at Quintral, he was able to move into a regular cottage at Cardiff. "He became stable, could take instructions from the carers and was happy," Paulo said. Over-medicating elderly patients with dementia - so-called "chemical restraints" - is a controversial topic. Two recent royal commissions found psychotropic medicines were being "misused and overused", particularly among older people and those with a disability. Nonetheless, Paulo accepts that his dad was medicated at hospital for "his own safety". "I'm not saying it's wrong, it's the way it is," he said. "It's difficult for medical staff to get the medication mix right because every individual is different. They have to get a balance and see how they react." Paulo said the staff treating his dad at hospital were "magnificent". However, there were not enough publicly funded dementia places. "The public needs to be more aware of this because dementia cases are rising," he said. "There needs to be more public pressure on politicians for funding and resources for this." Alfredo migrated to Newcastle from Portugal in 1981, along with his wife Maria and their three children. He worked as a boilermaker at Allco Steel at Tomago. As a metal worker, he fabricated steel for projects such as the Australian Maritime Museum, Darling Harbour, Chifley Tower and the Sydney Monorail. "Dad was hard-working, kind and caring, who loved his family and friends," Paulo said. "He was brave to bring his family halfway around the world to start a new life." Paulo said it was hard seeing his dad go through severe dementia. "I'm thankful there are places that can take these patients and care for them safely. We need more of them." Federal aged care Minister Sam Rae more than 400,000 people were living with dementia in Australia. This was expected to "double by 2058". "We're working to deliver support that gives people with dementia the dignified care and quality of life they deserve," Mr Rae said. The government had allocated $57 million "to support older patients with dementia to transition out of hospital into aged care".

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