domingo, 15 de dezembro de 2024

Polio is a deadly disease with a vaccine that a Trump ally adviser wants to ban

 

There’s a reason you rarely hear about people catching polio—let alone dying from the highly infectious disease—particularly in the U.S. And if you’re under the age of 70, you’ve likely never had to live in fear of acquiring it yourself. The polio vaccine has all but obliterated the illness that once killed thousands and paralyzed 15,000 people nationwide every year.

The above statistic hails from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the agency President-elect Donald Trump has chosen outspoken vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to run. When the once and future commander-in-chief announced his HHS pick on X on Nov. 14, he wrote, “The Safety and Health of all Americans is the most important role of any Administration,” and that Kennedy would help “end the Chronic Disease epidemic.” Trump also said public health has suffered from the “deception, misinformation, and disinformation” of pharmaceutical companies.

Vaccine disinformation is rampant anew as it’s come to light that an advisor of Kennedy’s petitioned the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to rescind its approval of the polio vaccine. The New York Times reported Dec. 13 that attorney Aaron Siri has been helping Kennedy vet candidates for top HHS jobs, a process that has included uncovering their vaccine views. Siri took to X later that afternoon to call the Times article a “hit piece” that “stokes fear,” and stressed that “assuring the safety of these injections is critical.”

The website of Siri & Glimstad LLP touts Siri as a managing partner who has fielded high-profile vaccine injury and policy cases, including “extensive litigation against federal agencies for transparency.” The law firm claims its clients have been awarded more than $5.2 billion in vaccine injury compensation.

In 2022, Siri filed the FDA petition on behalf of the nonprofit Informed Consent Action Network, alleging clinical trials of the polio vaccine weren’t rigorous enough to confirm its safety. The petition says the FDA “could not have fulfilled its statutory duty to assure the safety of [the vaccine] prior to licensing it for injection into infants, toddlers, and children.” Fortune 500 Europe company Sanofi manufactures the polio vaccine cited in the petition; head of vaccines Ayman Chit told the Times that the vaccine has undergone hundreds of studies, including safety follow-ups as long as six months.

Trump told TIME last month he planned to “have a big discussion” about childhood vaccination programs with Kennedy, who “does not disagree with vaccinations, all vaccinations.”

Is the polio vaccine safe?

While an oral polio vaccine (OPV) is administered in some countries, inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) has been the only available form of immunization in the U.S. since 2000. It’s not only safe but also effective. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), two doses of IPV provide at least 90% protection, while three doses offer at least 99% protection.

The risks and possible side effects of the polio vaccine are comparable to those of other vaccines, the CDC says, such as pain, soreness, swelling, and/or redness at the injection site. Fainting and dizziness are also possible. More serious reactions, including allergic reactions, are rare.

Three billion children have been vaccinated against polio since 1988, according to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, meaning 20 million people who would’ve otherwise been paralyzed by polio are walking today.

The vaccine has helped eradicate two of the three wild poliovirus strains, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Types 2 and 3 were eradicated in 1999 and 2020, respectively. Type 1 remained endemic in only Pakistan and Afghanistan as of 2022.


What is polio?

Poliomyelitis, or polio, is a distinctly contagious illness caused by a virus called poliovirus. The virus targets the nervous system, which is why it sometimes triggers spinal and respiratory paralysis—and death.

Polio primarily infects children under 5 and has done so around the globe for millennia. According to WHO, children with “withered limbs,” a hallmark of the ailment, are shown using canes in ancient Egyptian images. British physician Michael Underwood documented the first known clinical description of polio in 1789, and German doctor Jakob Heine formally recognized the condition in 1840.

Polio was “the most feared disease in the world” throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries, WHO says. It killed or paralyzed more than half a million people every year by the mid-20th century, and left many survivors with lifelong complications from wheelchairs to artificial respirators.

The first polio vaccine, developed by U.S. physician Jonas Salk, became available in 1955.

How does polio spread?

Polio typically spreads from person to person via fecal-oral transmission, according to the CDC, but it can also spread through a sick person’s respiratory droplets. You might catch it from touching a contaminated object and putting your fingers in your mouth, or simply being in close contact with someone who has polio. People carrying the virus can infect others for up to two weeks after symptoms appear, and asymptomatic people can still make others sick.

Though less common, polio can also circulate when people consume contaminated food or drink. Proper hand washing with soap and water is more important than ever when it comes to polio prevention, as the CDC notes alcohol-based hand sanitizers don’t kill poliovirus.

Wild poliovirus has been eradicated in the U.S., but an infected person traveling from abroad can spur an outbreak. Anyone not fully vaccinated against polio is susceptible to infection. In 2022, an unvaccinated man in New York contracted paralytic polio from community transmission; the CDC confirmed genetic sequencing had tied New York wastewater samples to those in London and Jerusalem.
What are the symptoms of polio?

While most people with polio are asymptomatic, according to the CDC, about 25% of patients will exhibit these flu-like symptoms, which last two to five days:

    Fever
    Headache
    Nausea
    Sore throat
    Stomach pain
    Tiredness

The flu-like symptoms may not seem too bad, but polio brings devastating complications for some. Up to 5% of polio patients develop meningitis, the inflammation of the tissues surrounding the brain and spinal cord, the CDC estimates. Up to 0.5% develop paralysis of or weakness in the arms and/or legs—and up to 10% of those paralyzed die.

Even people with mild infections can experience post-polio syndrome (PPS) decades later. Symptoms of this non-contagious disease include joint pain, muscle weakness, and mental and physical fatigue. Up to 40% of polio survivors get PPS, which begins 15 to 40 years after infection.

Seek emergency medical care if you suspect you or a loved one has developed polio symptoms.
How is polio treated?

No cure for polio exists, which is why medical and public health officials worldwide urge vaccination to prevent the illness. Polio survivors with muscle weakness may benefit from physical or occupational therapy.

If you grew up in the U.S., chances are you received your four IPV polio vaccine doses at these CDC-recommended ages:

    2 months
    4 months
    6–18 months
    4–6 years

If you’re unsure of your polio vaccination status, it’s not too late. The CDC recommends adults get three IPV doses, with the second one to two months after the first, and the third six to 12 months after the second.

FortuneWll
BYLindsey Leake
December 13, 2024 at 9:30 PM GMT

 

Conselheiro de Kennedy Jr. quer fim da vacinação contra a poliomielite e hepatite B

 

Um dos principais conselheiros jurídicos de Robert Kennedy Jr., o escolhido do presidente eleito Donald Trump para secretário da Saúde, tem tentado convencer os reguladores federais dos medicamentos nos Estados Unidos a revogar a aprovação das vacinas contra a poliomielite e a hepatite B, assim como a bloquear a distribuição de 13 outras vacinas essenciais.
Aaron Siri é o nome do advogado que tem ajudado Kennedy Jr. a selecionar os futuros administradores da saúde, que deverão entrar em funções quando Donald Trump tomar posse, no início do próximo ano.

Segundo uma investigação do New York Times publicada esta sexta-feira, Siri está envolvido nos esforços de longa data para forçar a Food and Drug Administration (FDA), agência federal dos EUA que gere a segurança dos medicamentos, a revogar a aprovação desta entidade a uma série de vacinas.

Entre as vacinas em questão, que salvam a vida e asseguram a saúde de milhões de norte-americanos, estão a da poliomielite e a da hepatite B.
De acordo com o NYT, Aaron Siri tem estado do lado de Kennedy Jr. enquanto este realiza entrevistas aos candidatos para cargos na área da saúde e os dois homens têm perguntado aos entrevistados qual a posição destes em relação às vacinas.

O próprio Kennedy já assumiu ser cético quanto à eficácia das inoculações, mas garantiu não ter planos para revogar a autorização de vacinas caso seja confirmado pelo Senado dos EUA para o cargo de secretário da Saúde.

A porta-voz de Kennedy Jr., Katie Miller, confirmou entretanto que Siri tem estado a aconselhá-lo, mas assegurou que este “tem sempre dito que quer transparência quanto às vacinas e dar às pessoas a possibilidade de escolher”.

No entanto, a proximidade entre o sobrinho do ex-presidente John F. Kennedy e Aaron Siri está a levantar preocupações acerca das futuras decisões do primeiro, tendo em conta o seu envolvimento no movimento anti-vacinação.

Kennedy insiste em associar vacinas a autismo

Siri trabalha em estreita colaboração com a Informed Consent Action Network (ICAN), uma organização sem fins lucrativos defensora da “liberdade médica” que há muito trava uma guerra contra as vacinas.


Segundo o New York Times, Siri apresentou em 2022 uma petição na qual pedia à FDA que revogasse a aprovação da vacina contra a poliomielite em nome da ICAN.

Esta doença infeciosa é provocada pelo poliovírus, contraído através da ingestão de substâncias contaminadas. Em tempos era das doenças mais temidas pelos americanos mas, com a administração da vacina, acabou por ser erradicada do país.

Aaron Siri esteve envolvido em ações judiciais que pediam a retirada ou a suspensão das vacinas contra a poliomielite e a hepatite B, tendo também apresentado uma petição à FDA para “suspender a distribuição” de 13 outras vacinas, de acordo com o NYT.

Esta semana, Donald Trump afirmou que Kennedy Jr. poderia investigar as vacinas devido a uma alegada associação à doença de autismo, o que já foi repetidamente desmentido por especialistas.

RTP

Outcry after RFK Jr linked to effort to nix US approval for polio vaccine

 


Robert F Kennedy Jr, a vaccine sceptic, has sought to distance himself from his lawyer’s polio vaccine petition.

Backlash has been building in the United States following a news report that links one of President-elect Donald Trump’s proposed cabinet members to an effort to revoke approval for the polio vaccine.

On Saturday, The Associated Press news agency published a statement from a spokesperson for Robert F Kennedy Jr, whom Trump has nominated to lead the Health and Human Services Department.

In the statement, Kennedy’s camp attempted to distance the nominee from a New York Times report that his lawyer Aaron Siri had petitioned to suspend approval for the life-saving vaccine.

“Mr Kennedy believes the Polio Vaccine should be available to the public and thoroughly and properly studied,” Katie Miller, Kennedy’s spokesperson, said.


But The New York Times article has raised alarm about Kennedy’s nomination to Health and Human Services, a department whose mission is to enhance the “health and well-being of all Americans”.

Kennedy, like Siri, is a vocal vaccine sceptic. In 2020, at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Kennedy helped spread doubts about vaccines designed to protect against the deadly virus, calling them “shoddily tested” and potentially “deadly”.

And in 2019, when a measles outbreak killed more than 80 children in Samoa, Kennedy wrote to the Samoan prime minister implying that a “defective vaccine” could be to blame. He has also pushed conspiracy theories that link vaccination to autism, a widely debunked belief.

Kennedy has long denied being anti-vaccine, arguing instead that he simply wants to ensure vaccine safety. But members of his own family have spoken out against his track record of spreading vaccine misinformation.

A Trump ally

In the 2024 presidential race, Kennedy ran on an independent ticket, before suspending his campaign in August and throwing his support behind Trump.

Afterwards, he became a prominent Trump surrogate, appearing numerous times on the campaign trail with the Republican leader.

Trump, in turn, teased early on that he would nominate Kennedy to his administration.

“I’m going to let him go wild on health,” Trump said at an October campaign stop at Madison Square Garden in New York. “I’m going to let him go wild on the medicines.”


Trump’s decision to pick Kennedy to head Health and Human Services has raised concern in the medical community about the future of efforts to limit the spread of preventable illness.


Those concerns were amplified on Friday, with The New York Times report. The article resurfaced a 2022 petition Siri made to the Food and Drug Administration to rescind the polio vaccine’s approval, along with that of other vaccines.

Polio is a highly infectious disease, capable of causing paralysis and death. There is no cure once infected, but vaccines can prevent its spread.

Siri has enjoyed a close relationship with Kennedy. The two campaigned together during Kennedy’s bid for office, and NBC News reported that Kennedy mulled appointing Siri as his attorney general, had he succeeded in winning the White House.

Swift criticism

The backlash to Friday’s report was swift, with bipartisan condemnation pouring in.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican, issued a statement on Friday warning that any effort to discredit the polio vaccine could threaten the nominee’s Senate confirmation hearing.

He did not mention Kennedy by name, but McConnell, 82, is known to be a survivor of childhood polio, which left his left leg briefly paralysed.


“Efforts to undermine public confidence in proven cures are not just uninformed — they’re dangerous,” McConnell wrote.

“Anyone seeking the Senate’s consent to serve in the incoming administration would do well to steer clear of even the appearance of association with such efforts.”

Democrats likewise criticised Kennedy’s association with Siri.

“Say goodbye to your smile and say hello to polio,” Senator Elizabeth Warren said in a video posted to social media. “This is a man who wants to stop kids from getting their polio and measles shots.”

Another senator, Chuck Schumer, called on Kennedy to make his position on the polio vaccine clear.

“It’s outrageous and dangerous for people in the Trump Transition to try and get rid of the polio vaccine that has virtually eradicated polio in America and saved millions of lives,” Schumer, the Senate majority leader, wrote. “RFK Jr. must state his position on this.”

Hillary Clinton, the 2016 Democratic nominee for the presidency and a longtime rival of Trump’s, posted her own rejoinder, with a screenshot of The New York Times article.

“I think Trump voters may be surprised to learn they voted to make polio great again,” she wrote, offering a riff on Trump’s slogan, “Make America Great Again”.

Aljazeera - 15 Dec 2024


Robert F Kennedy and Aaron Siri: two polititians that support Making Polio Great Again

 


Ever since Trump tapped bona fide conspiracy theorist and anti-vaxxer RFK Jr. to serve as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services and pledged to let him “go wild” on public health, a palpable sense of dread has loomed large. And it’s only getting worse: On Friday, the New York Times reported that Kennedy’s even more aggressively anti-vaxx lawyer, Aaron Siri — a man who has petitioned the FDA to revoke its approval of the polio vaccine — is apparently helping him pick out federal health officials for the incoming administration.

Kennedy has “privately expressed interest” in making Siri general counsel of the Department of Health and Human Services. “I love Aaron Siri,” Kennedy said in a November podcast episode hosted by Del Bigtree, ICAN’s founder and the former communications director for Kennedy’s presidential campaign. “There’s nobody who’s been a greater asset to the medical-freedom movement than him."

In 2022, Siri filed a petition targeting the polio vaccine on behalf of the Informed Consent Action Network, or ICAN, a nonprofit that bills itself as a proponent of “medical freedom.” In his petition, Siri argued that the FDA has not conducted sufficient safety studies on the vaccine, which has protected Americans from a virus that can cause lifelong paralysis, since a nationwide immunization campaign in the 1950s. Siri has also filed to revoke FDA approval of the hepatitis B vaccine and has petitioned to “pause distribution” of 13 other critical inoculations, including those that protect against tetanus, diphtheria, and hepatitis A

Donald Trump has picked vaccine sceptic and former independent presidential candidate Robert F Kennedy Jr, commonly known by his initials RFK Jr, has a history of spreading health information that scientists say is false. If his nomination is ratified by the Senate, he will lead a huge agency overseeing everything from food safety to medical research and welfare programmes. The executive director of the American Public Health Association (APHA) said the organisation will "absolutely oppose" Kennedy's nomination.


RFK Jr.’s Lawyer Has Already Been Targeting Vaccines

 

Ever since Trump tapped bona fide conspiracy theorist and anti-vaxxer RFK Jr. to serve as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services and pledged to let him “go wild” on public health, a palpable sense of dread has loomed large. And it’s only getting worse: On Friday, the New York Times reported that Kennedy’s even more aggressively anti-vaxx lawyer, Aaron Siri — a man who has petitioned the FDA to revoke its approval of the polio vaccine — is apparently helping him pick out federal health officials for the incoming administration.

Who is Siri anyway, besides a man making FDR turn in his grave? A close adviser to Kennedy who represented him during his presidential campaign, Siri is a partner at the New York–based law firm Siri & Glimstad, where he oversees roughly 40 professionals working on vaccine policy and regularly rails against “industry misconduct and government overreach.” His résumé includes helping clients skirt vaccination requirements and convincing a California judge to rule against a COVID-vaccine mandate in San Diego public schools.

In 2022, Siri filed a petition targeting the polio vaccine on behalf of the Informed Consent Action Network, or ICAN, a nonprofit that bills itself as a proponent of “medical freedom.” In his petition, Siri argued that the FDA has not conducted sufficient safety studies on the vaccine, which has protected Americans from a virus that can cause lifelong paralysis, since a nationwide immunization campaign in the 1950s. Siri has also filed to revoke FDA approval of the hepatitis B vaccine and has petitioned to “pause distribution” of 13 other critical inoculations, including those that protect against tetanus, diphtheria, and hepatitis A, demanding that their manufacturers disclose details about the risks of the ingredient aluminum, which researchers have linked to a tiny uptick in asthma. (Never mind the potentially fatal risk of, say, actually contracting diphtheria.)

Though Kennedy and Siri have independently stated that they don’t plan to strip away vaccine access (“You want to get the vaccine — it’s America, a free country,” Siri testified before the Arizona state legislature last spring), the Times reports that Siri has joined him at the Trump transition headquarters in Florida, where the duo have asked the candidates they’re interviewing for major health-policy positions about their views on vaccines. The Times also reports that Kennedy has “privately expressed interest” in making Siri general counsel of the Department of Health and Human Services. “I love Aaron Siri,” Kennedy said in a November podcast episode hosted by Del Bigtree, ICAN’s founder and the former communications director for Kennedy’s presidential campaign. “There’s nobody who’s been a greater asset to the medical-freedom movement than him.”

If all this weren’t frightening enough, Trump, in his “Person of the Year” interview with Time magazine this week, promised to do “very serious testing” on vaccines and says he will eliminate those he thinks “are not beneficial.” What could possibly go wrong?

Donald Trump saw another cabinet pick face strong opposition

 

Seventy-seven Nobel prize winners on Monday sent an open letter to the US Senate opposing the nomination of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President-elect Donald Trump's choice for Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), citing his "lack of credentials" and anti-vaccine beliefs (…) Kennedy is far from the only Trump cabinet nominee to stir controversy.

Among the most notable is Pete Hegseth, a Fox News anchor tapped to lead the Department of Defense, who has seen his nomination derailed with sexual assault allegations and rumors of excessive drinking.

And Trump's first pick for Attorney General, former US Congressman Matt Gaetz, withdrew after further scrutiny emerged of alleged sexual relations he had with a minor

after scores of Nobel prize laureates "strongly" urged the US Senate on Monday to deny Trump's pick for Secretary of Health and Human Services, former presidential hopeful Robert Kennedy Jr., deriding in an open letter Kennedy's "lack of credentials" and anti-vaccine views. 

PS: Let's make this photo viral!!
(Continue)

Mr. Trump, don't do this to other children!

Let's make this photo viral. It says everything that can be said about polio. Mr. Trump, don't make polio great again!


 

More than 75 Nobel laureates sign letter slamming Trump's choice of RFK Jr for US health secretary

 


Donald Trump saw another cabinet pick face strong opposition on Monday after scores of Nobel prize laureates "strongly" urged the US Senate on Monday to deny Trump's pick for Secretary of Health and Human Services, former presidential hopeful Robert Kennedy Jr., deriding in an open letter Kennedy's "lack of credentials" and anti-vaccine views.  

Seventy-seven Nobel prize winners on Monday sent an open letter to the US Senate opposing the nomination of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President-elect Donald Trump's choice for Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), citing his "lack of credentials" and anti-vaccine beliefs.

"In view of his record, placing Mr. Kennedy in charge of DHHS would put the public's health in jeopardy," concludes the letter signed by 77 Nobel recipients in medicine, chemistry, physics and economics.

Among the signatories is Drew Weissman, who received the 2023 Nobel Prize in Medicine for his work on developing mRNA vaccines, which was a major breakthrough in the fight against Covid-19.

Kennedy, a nephew of assassinated US president John F. Kennedy Jr., made his own White House run earlier this year before throwing his support behind Trump.

In return, Trump has tapped him to oversee the part of the executive branch in charge of health and medicine -- though his selection must be approved by a majority of the US Senate, as outlined by the Constitution.

An environmental lawyer by trade with no medical background, Kennedy has spent years professing conspiracy theories linking vaccines and autism, and most recently spread misinformation about Covid-19 vaccines.

He has said if he is confirmed for the position he will work to remove fluoride from tap water in the US, despite its addition being considered a major victory against bacteria causing tooth decay.

"In addition to his lack of credentials or relevant experience in medicine, science, public health, or administration," the letter reads, "Mr. Kennedy has been an opponent of many health-protecting and life-saving vaccines, such as those that prevent measles and polio."
(Continue)