美国卫生及公共服务部重启“更安全的儿童疫苗特别工作组”
HHS Reboots 'Task Force On Safer Childhood Vaccines'

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/hhs-reboots-task-force-safer-childhood-vaccines

美国卫生及公共服务部(HHS)已重新成立更安全的儿童疫苗工作组,该小组最初由国会在1990年设立,并于1998年解散。由国立卫生研究院(NIH)主任杰伊·巴塔查亚博士领导,该工作组由来自NIH、FDA和CDC的领导人组成,将专注于通过研究、开发和监督来提高疫苗安全性。HHS将在两年内向国会提交第一份报告,此后每两年更新一次。 重新成立源于一项诉讼,指控HHS部长罗伯特·F·肯尼迪违反联邦法律,未能按照1986年国家儿童疫苗伤害法案的要求召开该工作组。该法案要求定期向国会报告疫苗安全性的改进情况,而这些报告已经超过35年未提交。 虽然时间点引发了对潜在法律策略的质疑,但该工作组的任务承诺将提高透明度,并可能对全国儿童疫苗计划进行改革。

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原文

Authored by Jon Fleetwood,

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) on Thursday announced the reinstatement of the Task Force on Safer Childhood Vaccines, a federal panel “created by Congress to improve the safety, quality, and oversight of vaccines administered to American children.”

“[T]oday’s action reaffirms the Department’s commitment towards continuous improvement in childhood vaccine safety oversight,” the HHS press release reads.

“HHS will transmit its first formal report to Congress within two years, with updates every two years thereafter.”

The original Task Force had been disbanded in 1998.

“By reinstating this Task Force, we are reaffirming our commitment to rigorous science, continuous improvement, and the trust of American families,” said National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya. “NIH is proud to lead this effort to advance vaccine safety and support innovation that protects children without compromise.”

The Task Force is made up of senior leadership from NIH, FDA, and CDC.

Director Bhattacharya will serve as Chairman of the Task Force, per the release.

The Task Force will produce recommendations for:

  • “The development, promotion, and refinement of childhood vaccines that result in fewer and less serious adverse reactions than those vaccines currently on the market.”

  • “Improvements in vaccine development, production, distribution, and adverse reaction reporting — along with supporting research to make vaccines safer.”

The Defender, a news outlet operated by Children’s Health Defense (founded by current HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.), noted that the announcement came just one day before the agency’s deadline to respond to a lawsuit alleging Kennedy violated federal law by failing to convene the task force after taking office.

Filed in May by attorney Ray Flores and funded by CHD, the suit claims Kennedy has been in breach of the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986, which mandates that the HHS secretary establish a vaccine safety task force and submit progress reports to Congress every two years.

The Defender explained that the 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act requires HHS to form a task force made up of the health secretary, the FDA commissioner, and the directors of NIH and CDC, and to report to Congress every two years on vaccine safety improvements.

Flores says no such reports have been filed in over 35 years.

A 2018 lawsuit by Kennedy and Aaron Siri confirmed the absence of any reports, noting that the original task force, created in 1990, was disbanded in 1998.

The law allows citizens to sue if these requirements aren’t met, which Flores cited in his case.

Whether HHS’s sudden move is a genuine step toward long-overdue vaccine safety oversight—or simply a legal maneuver to head off a citizen-led lawsuit (or both)—remains to be seen.

If the Task Force follows through on its mandate, it could finally bring long-absent transparency, accountability, and meaningful safety reforms to the nation’s childhood vaccine program.

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