Opinion Editorial Cartoons Op-Ed Editorials Letters to the Editor

Kennedy ‘spoke up’ about vaccine issues

Presidential candidate Robert Kennedy Jr. is right – vaccines haven’t been sufficiently safety tested.

In a recent New England Journal of Medicine article, a renowned vaccinologist and his co-authors supported Kennedy’s stance by explaining how U.S. post-market surveillance systems are inadequately funded, and existing funds haven’t been allocated toward vaccine-safety monitoring and science.

In addition, they said people want “public health authorities to mitigate and prevent rare but serious adverse reactions –which no longer seem rare when vaccines are given to millions or billions of people.”

Although vaccine adverse events are indeed rare, they impact tens of thousands of people when administered on a large scale. Those injured are often ignored because it’s financially inconvenient to acknowledge their existence. However, if integrity and honesty are not restored in medical research, vaccine hesitancy will continue to rise.

I’m an instructor of a National Institutes of Health-based responsible conduct of research course, and I care deeply about science, health, education and young people. Health authorities need to be reminded that bodily autonomy and informed consent are key tenets of our free society.

Rather than coercing us to inject something into our bodies, they need to use education and persuasion to relay risks and benefits of vaccines, at both the individual and population levels.

For 40 decades, Kennedy fought polluters and the agencies that didn’t uphold regulations. When he recognized issues in vaccine research, he spoke up about them. He should be appreciated for his efforts to correct systems that have veered off course. He’s got my vote!

Christine Smith

Durango