CDC Vaccine Advisory Committee Charter Revision Withdrawn
L'essentiel
- A revised charter for the CDC's vaccine advisory committee, proposed by Health Secretary Robert F.
- Kennedy Jr. to include anti-vaccine allies and focus on vaccine risks, has been withdrawn due to an administrative error.
- This follows a federal judge's injunction against Kennedy's previous attempts to alter the committee's composition and vaccine recommendations.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
A revised charter for the CDC's vaccine advisory committee was withdrawn due to an administrative error. This follows previous attempts by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to alter the committee's composition and vaccine recommendations, which were challenged in court.
A revised charter document for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s influential vaccine advisory committee has been withdrawn by the Health Department over an administrative error, according to a notice published in the Federal Register Tuesday.
The charter’s revisions under anti-vaccine Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. would have allowed Kennedy to appoint dubiously qualified anti-vaccine allies to advise the CDC. It also would have directed the CDC panel to focus on alleged vaccine injuries and risks and welcomed fringe groups and anti-vaccine organizations to participate in developing federal vaccine policy.
Kennedy’s move to reshape the CDC panel—the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP—came amid Kennedy’s many other attempts to undermine it, as well as a court order to undo that meddling.
In June 2025, Kennedy summarily fired all 17 experts from ACIP and quickly replaced them with unvetted and unqualified anti-vaccine allies. Kennedy’s ACIP then held several meetings in which they aired anti-vaccine views and misinformation, allowed anti-vaccine activists to give unvetted presentations, and ultimately voted to remove longstanding, evidence-based federal vaccine recommendations based on anti-vaccine rhetoric. That includes the removal of a universal recommendation for a hepatitis B vaccine dose at birth, despite no evidence of any safety concerns or any benefit to delaying the dose. Subsequent modeling studies found that the change will mean more infections, increases in liver cancers and deaths, as well as millions of dollars in healthcare costs.
In January, Kennedy sidestepped ACIP entirely to overhaul the CDC’s vaccine schedule for children, slashing the number of recommended vaccinations from 17 to 11.
In March, a federal judge issued a temporary injunction to undo Kennedy’s changes, ruling that Kennedy likely violated federal regulations in unilaterally altering the CDC vaccine schedule and that the new ACIP members were unqualified—as outlined by the panel’s charter—nullifying all of their votes on federal vaccine recommendations.
While the Health Department is working to appeal the injunction, Kennedy attempted to circumvent the judge’s ruling on the ACIP members by altering the committee’s charter to, among other things, allow for people without expertise in immunizations and public health to be members.
But, for now, that effort, too, has been thwarted. According to the notice on Tuesday, the new charter has been withdrawn for not following a federal requirement on public notification.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
The Health Department will likely attempt to appeal the federal injunction against Kennedy's previous ACIP changes.
Probable · En quelques mois
Kennedy may attempt to re-introduce revised charter language or find other means to influence ACIP.
Possible · En quelques mois
Questions ouvertes
- Will the Health Department attempt to re-submit the revised charter?
- What is the Health Department's strategy to appeal the federal injunction?
- What are the long-term public health consequences of the previous vaccine recommendation changes?
- Will Kennedy attempt further changes to the ACIP or CDC vaccine schedule?






