It was one of many extra tense exchanges in an already heated confirmation hearing as senators put Robert F Kennedy Jr.’s report on vaccines — and his shifting stances on their security and efficacy — underneath the microscope.
Senator Angela Alsobrooks, a Democrat from Maryland, pointed to previous feedback made by Kennedy through which he mentioned, “We shouldn’t be giving black individuals the identical vaccine schedule that is given to whites as a result of their immune system is healthier than ours.”
“So what completely different vaccine schedule would you say I ought to have acquired?” requested Alsobrooks, who’s Black. “With all due respect, that’s so harmful.”
In response, Kennedy cited a well known vaccine researcher and mentioned there are a “sequence of research” displaying that “to specific antigens blacks have a a lot stronger response.”
The idea for Kennedy’s remark seems to be work performed by a group on the Mayo Clinic who checked out variations within the immune response to vaccination by race. The info did present African People mounted a better antibody response after MMR (Measles, Mumps, and Rubella) vaccination in comparison with white individuals.
Nonetheless, the research’s personal writer tells NPR the info would not assist a change in vaccine schedule based mostly on race.
Dr. Richard Kennedy — a vaccine researcher at the Mayo Clinic who’s not associated to Robert F Kennedy Jr. — says it is true the immune response to vaccination can fluctuate by race, intercourse, and “probably dozens of different elements.”
However suggesting that African People ought to have completely different schedules could be “twisting the info far past what they really reveal,” he says.
Dr. Carlos del Rio, a professor of medicine at Emory University, agrees, saying such a conclusion is “taking it to a really unsafe place,” partly as a result of vaccination rates are already decrease amongst Black youngsters.
Regardless of his history of undermining trust within the security of vaccines, Kennedy has spent the affirmation hearings arguing he is supportive of them. However he is stopped wanting truly renouncing previous statements together with debunked assertions that vaccines trigger autism.
A overview of Kennedy’s full feedback throughout that 2021 appearance which Alsobrooks quoted from, reveals Kennedy making further false claims in regards to the security of vaccines.
He begins by citing a statistic from a research that reported discovering a a lot greater price of autism in Black youngsters who acquired the MMR vaccine on schedule. Nonetheless, that paper was retracted because of undeclared competing pursuits on the a part of the writer and issues in regards to the validity of the strategies and statistical evaluation. The writer is the chief scientific officer for Children’s Health Defense, the anti-vaccine advocacy group Kennedy based and led for a few years.
Kennedy then appears to reference the Mayo Clinic research, saying it reveals the measles vaccine will “push their immune response over the cliff” and “the physique of these black boys goes to start to assault their very own physique pondering that it’s a overseas invader.”
He provides: “The vaccines that we’re giving them are overloading them and inflicting autoimmunity.”
None of that is supported by the precise research, which did not take a look at adversarial occasions or unintended effects.
“The info don’t present that one racial group experiences elevated hurt or autoimmunity in comparison with every other racial group,” says research writer Richard Kennedy.
RFK Jr. has been concerned in different efforts to solid doubt on the protection of vaccines based mostly on race.
A movie that was produced by Kennedy a number of years in the past explicitly raised the idea that vaccines could possibly be disproportionately harming individuals of shade — and misrepresents one other research by the Mayo Clinic, this one on the rubella vaccine, to bolster its argument.
That research’s writer, Dr. Gregory Poland, instructed NPR they discovered “no proof of elevated vaccine unintended effects” and that any declare of “elevated vulnerability” amongst African-People who obtain the rubella vaccine is “merely not supported by both this research or the science.”
This story was edited by Jane Greenhalgh