The news: HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is reviving a children’s vaccine task force after pressure from anti-vaccine advocates. The reinstated Task Force on Safer Childhood Vaccines will be led by NIH director Jay Bhattacharya and include FDA and CDC senior officials.
Digging into the details: Kennedy reopened the task force on Thursday. He was sued in May by the Children’s Health Defense, an anti-vaccine group he founded in 2007 and served as chairman until 2023, for failing to restart it.
- The original task force launched in 1986 created by Congress to oversee the safety and quality of childhood vaccines and closed in 1998.
- The new Bhattacharya-led task force is focused on developing, promoting, and refining childhood vaccines with “fewer and less serious adverse reactions” than current vaccines, per HHS.
- Its first report will come out in two years and update every two years after.
Zooming out: The task force is the latest move by Kennedy to establish new vaccine oversight.