Politics

/

ArcaMax

Lisa Jarvis: RFK Jr. was just the start of Trump's bad public health picks

Lisa Jarvis, Bloomberg Opinion on

Published in Op Eds

President-elect Donald Trump’s stunning appointment of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services has given way to a slate of nominees for key health agencies that portend worrisome changes in how the US approaches public health.

With the exception of former Florida Representative Dave Weldon, nominated for director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Trump’s picks to lead Food and Drug Administration, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and surgeon general all lack government experience. And they share a tendency to offer contrarian takes, whether about the risks of COVID or the view that modern medicine is failing us, and our food system is making us sick.

Most disturbing is that Kennedy isn’t the only one among these picks to have expressed a broader distrust of vaccines. That should elicit deep anxiety about what’s to come from our nation’s top health agencies.

“What ties them all together is this shared anti-expert ethos,” says Matthew Motta, a Boston University political scientist who studies vaccine policy. Even though some of the nominees are scientists or doctors, they have positioned themselves on the fringes among most in their fields. “It’s not just that you can’t trust scientific research, but you can’t trust the people who produce it.”

The most conventional choice in the bunch is Dr. Marty Makary, Trump’s pick to head FDA. A surgeon and public policy researcher at Johns Hopkins University and frequent Fox News guest, Makary has sharply criticized the government’s COVID response, challenged modern medical dogma and decried the ills of the American food system.

Still, pharma and biotech executives expressed relief at Makary’s nomination which suggests any efforts to shake up the FDA are likely to focus more on the food rather than the drug side of the agency’s purview. And public health experts largely seem to think Makary will side with science when it comes to critical topics like vaccines.

Among the more leftfield appointments are Dr. Mehmet Oz as CMS administrator and Dr. Janette Nesheiwat as surgeon general. Both have hewed to the establishment on most medical subjects but tend to veer into misinformation and magical thinking on others. Oz has taken heat for promoting miracle cures ranging from the dubious to the dangerous. Meanwhile, Nesheiwat, director of a network of urgent care facilities in New York and New Jersey and frequent Fox News contributor, is hawking a line of supplements and a book that speaks to the “transformative power of prayer.”

We have yet to hear Trump’s pick to lead the National Institutes of Health, though Stanford physician Jay Bhattacharya is considered the top contender. As one of the authors of the Great Barrington Declaration, the now infamous letter criticizing the US government’s response to the pandemic and calling for an end to lockdowns, Bhattacharya fits the contrarian mold.

The most troubling nominee (after Kennedy, whose disqualifying characteristics I’ve previously outlined) is Trump’s choice to lead the CDC. Weldon spent some of his 14 years in Congress questioning the safety of routine childhood vaccines, perpetuating the false claim that thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative used in the measles, mumps and rubella vaccines, causes autism. In 2007, several years after the studies that first raised fears of a connection between MMR and autism had been discredited, he proposed a bill to ban mercury in vaccines.

Like Kennedy, Weldon seems to believe US health agencies, particularly the CDC, are withholding vaccine safety information from the public. He coauthored a failed bill that would have moved vaccine safety research from the CDC to an independent agency within HHS. If confirmed, Weldon would be in charge of the agency responsible for that oversight.

The specter of Kennedy and Weldon working together to craft the CDC’s future is cause for concern. The agency is responsible for setting vaccine recommendations (who should get them and how often they should be administered), decisions that inform states’ policies and public access to the shots.

 

Even if Trump’s health team doesn’t directly prevent access to vaccines, it can still cause plenty of harm. As Motta points out, giving vaccine skeptics such a loud megaphone at HHS gives license to state lawmakers to act. None of this team is even in office, and we’re already seeing their messaging embolden state health authorities. Less than two weeks after the appointment of Kennedy, who has vowed to ban fluoridation, Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo advised local municipalities to remove fluoride from the water supply and changed the health department’s guidance on the topic.

We shouldn’t be surprised, then, if state-level anti-vaccine laws, already increasing in the years since the pandemic, speed up.

That’s the opposite of what we need to happen amid a rising tide of vaccine hesitancy. Whoever walked into these roles was already facing an uphill battle to restore public trust in vaccines. Instead of a team with a unified message supporting this cornerstone public health tool, we have one that could do long-term harm.

That anti-vaccine messaging could further weaken our defenses against existing threats like measles and would be an absolute disaster amid a future pandemic. That’s not such a far-fetched scenario, given the ongoing spread of H5N1 in dairy and a limited number of humans. (Worries about bird flu ratcheted up slightly last week amid news that the genome of the virus that caused a teenager in British Columbia to become critically ill contained mutations that might make it more infectious to humans.)

During the start of the COVID pandemic, Trump made health agencies’ jobs much harder by routinely undermining their messaging or sowing confusion. Public health leaders had to walk a careful line — some more successful than others — between acknowledging Trump’s fringe ideas and correcting them. It was a diversion that made it hard for the public to focus on the correct information and left people wondering whom to trust — Trump or the experts he’d appointed. It’s fair to wonder how forcefully this slate of health leaders would push back against misinformation — or if they might promote false information alongside the president.

The Senate still can oppose Kennedy’s nomination (and gets a say in appointing Makary and Weldon, too). Putting a more reasoned thinker, one with public health experience and more mainstream, evidence-backed views, in the job would go a long way to alleviating fears of long-term damage — to the agencies themselves, to public trust in science, and to the very health of the nation.

____

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Lisa Jarvis is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering biotech, health care and the pharmaceutical industry. Previously, she was executive editor of Chemical & Engineering News.


©2024 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com/opinion. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus

 

Related Channels

ACLU

ACLU

By The ACLU
Amy Goodman

Amy Goodman

By Amy Goodman
Armstrong Williams

Armstrong Williams

By Armstrong Williams
Austin Bay

Austin Bay

By Austin Bay
Ben Shapiro

Ben Shapiro

By Ben Shapiro
Betsy McCaughey

Betsy McCaughey

By Betsy McCaughey
Bill Press

Bill Press

By Bill Press
Bonnie Jean Feldkamp

Bonnie Jean Feldkamp

By Bonnie Jean Feldkamp
Cal Thomas

Cal Thomas

By Cal Thomas
Christine Flowers

Christine Flowers

By Christine Flowers
Clarence Page

Clarence Page

By Clarence Page
Danny Tyree

Danny Tyree

By Danny Tyree
David Harsanyi

David Harsanyi

By David Harsanyi
Debra Saunders

Debra Saunders

By Debra Saunders
Dennis Prager

Dennis Prager

By Dennis Prager
Dick Polman

Dick Polman

By Dick Polman
Erick Erickson

Erick Erickson

By Erick Erickson
Froma Harrop

Froma Harrop

By Froma Harrop
Jacob Sullum

Jacob Sullum

By Jacob Sullum
Jamie Stiehm

Jamie Stiehm

By Jamie Stiehm
Jeff Robbins

Jeff Robbins

By Jeff Robbins
Jessica Johnson

Jessica Johnson

By Jessica Johnson
Jim Hightower

Jim Hightower

By Jim Hightower
Joe Conason

Joe Conason

By Joe Conason
Joe Guzzardi

Joe Guzzardi

By Joe Guzzardi
John Micek

John Micek

By John Micek
John Stossel

John Stossel

By John Stossel
Josh Hammer

Josh Hammer

By Josh Hammer
Judge Andrew Napolitano

Judge Andrew Napolitano

By Judge Andrew P. Napolitano
Laura Hollis

Laura Hollis

By Laura Hollis
Marc Munroe Dion

Marc Munroe Dion

By Marc Munroe Dion
Michael Barone

Michael Barone

By Michael Barone
Michael Reagan

Michael Reagan

By Michael Reagan
Mona Charen

Mona Charen

By Mona Charen
Oliver North and David L. Goetsch

Oliver North and David L. Goetsch

By Oliver North and David L. Goetsch
R. Emmett Tyrrell

R. Emmett Tyrrell

By R. Emmett Tyrrell
Rachel Marsden

Rachel Marsden

By Rachel Marsden
Rich Lowry

Rich Lowry

By Rich Lowry
Robert B. Reich

Robert B. Reich

By Robert B. Reich
Ruben Navarrett Jr

Ruben Navarrett Jr

By Ruben Navarrett Jr.
Ruth Marcus

Ruth Marcus

By Ruth Marcus
S.E. Cupp

S.E. Cupp

By S.E. Cupp
Salena Zito

Salena Zito

By Salena Zito
Star Parker

Star Parker

By Star Parker
Stephen Moore

Stephen Moore

By Stephen Moore
Susan Estrich

Susan Estrich

By Susan Estrich
Ted Rall

Ted Rall

By Ted Rall
Terence P. Jeffrey

Terence P. Jeffrey

By Terence P. Jeffrey
Tim Graham

Tim Graham

By Tim Graham
Tom Purcell

Tom Purcell

By Tom Purcell
Veronique de Rugy

Veronique de Rugy

By Veronique de Rugy
Victor Joecks

Victor Joecks

By Victor Joecks
Wayne Allyn Root

Wayne Allyn Root

By Wayne Allyn Root

Comics

Ed Gamble Kevin Siers Mike Smith A.F. Branco Pedro X. Molina Bob Gorrell