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The American Medical Association came out marching this week to The executive order that President Trump signed on Friday which also confirms the intentions of promoting US childhood vaccination recommendations after those of Denmark – a country with universal health care, less diversity, and a population almost the size of Maryland.
“There is no reliable scientific evidence to support,” such a change, AMA President Bobby Mukkamala said in a statement. The current vaccine schedule “is built on decades of rigorous research and real-world evidence, and is designed to protect children in the U.S. when they are at risk of contracting our country’s diseases,” he said.
The plan to coordinate the recommendations of the federal children’s vaccinations and the Danish ones was the first was revealed by anti-vaccination Secretary of Health Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in January. The revision sees the total number of approved vaccines drop from 17 to 11, reverting to recommendations for shots against rotavirus, COVID-19, influenza, meningococcal disease, hepatitis A, and hepatitis B. It came from Trump’s December plan to coordinate US vaccine recommendations with “good practices from peers, developed countries.”
From this order, the Trump administration acted “comprehensive scientific evaluation“Which concluded that the US should emulate Denmark.” The work was carried out by Trump’s political staff, Tracy Beth Høeg, a sports medicine doctor, and Martin Kulldorff, a biostatistician, none of whom have expertise in vaccine outcomes, but all of whom are supporters of Kennedy’s vaccine.
The director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention at the time—Jim O’Neill, a technology entrepreneur—signed on to the changes. But in March, a federal judge issued a temporary injunction changed the changefinding that Kennedy violated federal law by using them.
While the government is worried about the decision, the new administration on Friday reaffirmed Kennedy’s intentions to take the Danish route, calling “change” US vaccine policy with “best practices from developed countries.” It says that the scientific study by Høeg and Kulldorff is a “Federal Government directive” and that the CDC “will take steps to change the vaccination policy for children and adolescents in the United States.”