Editorial written by The Miami Herald Editorial Board.
President Donald Trump nominated Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to be health and human services secretary to shake up the country’s public health status quo. Shake it up he has, putting vaccine skepticism at the helm of life-changing decisions and placing chosen outcomes ahead of data.
Florida is proving to be a testing ground for this new antiscience experiment in the U.S., which risks setting us back to a time when people, in particular children, died of preventable diseases.
On Wednesday, the state surgeon general, Dr. Joseph Ladapo, announced plans to end all vaccine mandates for children to attend schools, a move Gov. Ron DeSantis endorsed. That means parents will be allowed to send kids to school without being immunized for measles, mumps, polio, chicken pox and hepatitis B. This is the same Ladapo who’s pushed widely debunked claims that the mRNA vaccines contaminate a person’s DNA.
School vaccine requirements have been a longstanding practice in all states, with varying exemptions (Florida, for example, has a religious exemption). But anything that’s been longstanding public-health practice has now been upended by the Trump administration under the guise of fighting the medical and scientific establishment. And we probably won’t know the consequences of this setback until the next measles outbreak or the next pandemic.
Undermining vaccination and its effectiveness might help DeSantis remain relevant with Trump’s Republican base as he considers his next political move. As for Trump, who put together Operation Warp Speed to develop a coronavirus vaccine early in the pandemic, he now has to court anti-vaxxers who helped elect him.
Meanwhile, public health systems — in the state and the nation — will pay the price for political expediency.
As reported by several outlets last week, chaos among the federal government’s shifting vaccine policies have made it harder for people to get the COVID-19 shots that were once widely available at the country’s largest pharmacy chains.
CVS said last Thursday the vaccine was not available at pharmacies in 16 states, including Florida, because of “the current regulatory environment.” The day after, the company said it would administer the shots in Florida and another 12 states, plus the District of Columbia, but only to people who have a prescription, which severely restricts access to those who can visit a doctor. In Massachusetts, Nevada and New Mexico, CVS still cannot provide the shots at all, the New York Times reported.
At Walgreens, a New York Times reporter tried to book vaccine appointments in all 50 states and found that 16 of them also required a prescription. Florida was not among them but when a member of the Herald Editorial Board tried to book an appointment in Miami though the company’s website on Tuesday, COVID shots were not available.
This is confusing, and it shouldn’t be. The country should be ramping up its immunization efforts ahead of the fall and winter, when cases of respiratory viral infections tend to spike.