Skip to content
NOWCAST KCRA 3 News at 6am
Live Now
Advertisement

Trump rounds out his health team with CDC, FDA and surgeon general nominations

Trump rounds out his health team with CDC, FDA and surgeon general nominations
OVERHAULING THE NATION’S HEALTH SYSTEM. IT’S A TOP PRIORITY FOR PRESIDENT ELECT TRUMP’S CONTROVERSIAL CHOICE AS SECRETARY FOR HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES. JOINING US NOW IS DOCTOR SCOTT HADLAND, CHIEF OF ADOLESCENT MEDICINE AT MASS GENERAL FOR CHILDREN. DOCTOR HADLAND, GOOD TO SEE YOU. THANKS FOR COMING IN. GOOD TO SEE YOU, TOO. ALL RIGHT. AS YOU KNOW, ROBERT F KENNEDY JR ACCEPTED THE NOMINATION YESTERDAY. HE HAS ALREADY SAID HE WANTS TO END VACCINE MANDATES FOR CHILDREN. WHAT COULD THAT MEAN FOR YOUR PATIENTS? I WORRY ABOUT IT. A LOT FOR MY PATIENTS. YOU KNOW, WE KNOW THAT VACCINES SAVE LIVES. AND JUST TO PUT SOME DATA BEHIND THIS THIS SUMMER, THE CDC PUT OUT A STUDY SHOWING THAT ABOUT 1.1 MILLION LIVES HAVE BEEN SAVED OVER THE LAST 30 YEARS FROM VACCINATION AND THAT’S A LOT OF LIVES. JUST TO PUT THAT INTO CONTEXT, THAT IS THE COMBINED POPULATION OF BOSTON, CAMBRIDGE, SPRINGFIELD AND WORCESTER LIVES SAVED FROM VACCINES. AND SO THIS IS REALLY CRITICAL THAT WE DO WHAT WE CAN TO GET AS MANY PEOPLE VACCINATED AS POSSIBLE. AND TO BE CLEAR, MOST OF THE PATIENTS AND FAMILIES I WORK WITH WANT VACCINATION. BUT WE NEED TO MAKE SURE THAT AS MANY PEOPLE GET VACCINATED AS POSSIBLE TO HELP PREVENT OUTBREAKS. SO I GUESS THE QUESTION IS, HOW MUCH IS MASSACHUSETTS IMPACTED? RIGHT. SO PUBLIC HEALTH DECISIONS, THEY’RE NOT JUST MADE ON THE FEDERAL LEVEL. THEY’RE ALSO MADE ON THE STATE AND LOCAL LEVEL. IN YOUR EXPERIENCE, THOUGH, HOW MUCH INFLUENCE DOES HHS HAVE ON THE LOCAL LEVEL? WELL, HHS DOES HAVE A LOT OF INFLUENCE OVER OUR DAY TO DAY PRACTICE. AS AN EXAMPLE, WHEN I GIVE A VACCINE TO A FAMILY OR TO TO A CHILD, AND I’M EDUCATING THE FAMILY, I HAND EDUCATIONAL MATERIAL THAT COMES FROM THE CDC, WHICH IS OVERSEEN BY HHS. THE OTHER THING THAT THE CDC DOES IS IT HELPS US TO TRACK OUTBREAKS. AND YOU KNOW, TALK TO ANY PEDIATRICIAN AND WE’LL TELL YOU A STORY ABOUT A PATIENT THAT WE CARED FOR WHO WAS UNVACCINATED, THAT HAD A REALLY TERRIBLE THING HAPPEN. THE TEENAGER THAT I CARED FOR, WHO HAD A MENINGITIS INFECTION BECAUSE HE WASN’T HE WASN’T VACCINATED AGAINST IT. AND ALTHOUGH HE DIDN’T LOSE HIS LIFE, HE LOST HIS HEARING. OR, YOU KNOW, THE SCHOOL AGED CHILD WHO DEVELOPED TETANUS THAT I CARED FOR AND ENDED UP IN THE ICU ON A RESPIRATOR. THE CDC HELPS US TRACK ALL OF THIS INFORMATION, LETS US KNOW WHEN OUTBREAKS ARE OCCURRING, AND HELPS KEEP. US ORGANIZED SO THAT WE CAN HAVE A PUBLIC HEALTH INTERVENTION AROUND THAT. I MEAN, YOU DON’T WANT YOUR KID GOING TO SCHOOL WONDERING IF THE KID NEXT TO YOU IS GOING TO GIVE YOU MEASLES OR SOME, SOME, SOME, FRANKLY, DISEASE THAT WE SHOULD BE VACCINATED AGAINST. WHAT ABOUT THE DOCTOR’S ROLE IN THIS AND THOSE DOCTORS ORGANIZATIONS LIKE THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION OR THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS? RIGHT. THOSE PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS, AND I’M A PART OF THEM, ARE REALLY IMPORTANT FOR WHAT WE DO. DOCTORS ARE OFTEN VERY BUSY, RIGHT. WE’RE SEEING PATIENTS. WE’RE ON THE FRONT LINES. WE DON’T HAVE A LOT OF TIME. AND SORT OF OPPORTUNITY TO HELP ADVOCATE DIRECTLY. AND SO THESE ORGANIZATIONS HELP US DIRECTLY KEEP OUR POLICYMAKERS INFORMED SO THAT THEY HAVE THE BEST POSSIBLE INFORMATION SO THAT THEY MAKE GOOD DECISIONS ON BEHALF OF THE PUBLIC’S HEALTH. OKAY. WELL, DOCTOR SCOTT HADLAND, FIRST OF ALL, HAPPY BELATED BIRTHDAY. HAD A BIRTHDAY THI
Advertisement
Trump rounds out his health team with CDC, FDA and surgeon general nominations
President-elect Donald Trump on Friday nominated Dr. Marty Makary to lead the Food and Drug Administration, selecting a surgeon and author who gained national attention for opposing vaccine mandates and some other public health measures during the COVID-19 pandemic.Makary, a professor at Johns Hopkins University, is the latest in a string of Trump nominees who have declared the U.S. health system “broken," vowing a shakeup. As part of a flurry of nominations late Friday night, Trump also tapped doctor and former Republican Rep. Dave Weldon of Florida to lead the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Fox News contributor Janette Nesheiwat, meanwhile, is set to be the nation's next surgeon general.Some of Makary's views align closely with the man who is poised to be his boss — prominent environmental lawyer and anti-vaccine organizer Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whom Trump put forward as the next U.S. Department of Health and Human Services secretary.In books and articles, Makary has decried the overprescribing of drugs, the use of pesticides on foods and the undue influence of pharmaceutical and insurance companies over doctors and government regulators, points that Kennedy has also harped on for years.Trump said Makary, trained as a surgeon and cancer specialist, “will restore FDA to the gold standard of scientific research, and cut the bureaucratic red tape at the agency to make sure Americans get the medical cures and treatments they deserve.”Headquartered in the Maryland suburbs outside Washington, the 18,000 employees of the FDA are responsible for the safety and effectiveness of prescription drugs, vaccines and medical devices as well as a swath of other consumer goods, including food, cosmetics and vaping products. Altogether those products represent an estimated 20% of U.S. consumer spending annually, or $2.6 trillion.Makary gained prominence on Fox News and other conservative outlets for his contrarian views during the COVID-19 pandemic. He questioned the need for masking and, though not opposed to the COVID-19 vaccine, had concerns about booster vaccinations in young children. He was part of a vocal group of physicians calling for greater emphasis on herd immunity to stop the virus, or the idea that mass infections would quickly lead to population-level protection.The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated that COVID-19 vaccinations prevented more than 686,000 U.S. deaths in 2020 and 2021 alone. While children faced much lower rates of hospitalization and death from the virus, medical societies including the American Academy of Pediatrics concluded that vaccinations significantly reduced severe disease in the age group.Makary has lamented how drugmakers used misleading data to urge doctors to prescribe OxyContin and other opioids as low-risk, non-addictive pain relievers. That marketing was permitted under FDA-approved labeling from the 1990s, suggesting the drugs were safe for common ailments like back pain.In more recent years, the FDA has come under fire for approving drugs for Alzheimer's, ALS and other conditions based on incomplete data that failed to show meaningful benefits for patients.A push toward greater scrutiny of drug safety and effectiveness would be a major reversal at FDA, which for decades has focused on speedier drug approvals. That trend has been fueled by industry lobbying and fees paid by drugmakers to help the FDA hire additional reviewers.Kennedy has proposed ending those payments, which would require billions in new funding from the federal budget.Other administration priorities would likely run into similar roadblocks. For instance, Kennedy wants to bar drugmakers from advertising on TV, a multibillion-dollar market that supports many TV and cable networks. The Supreme Court and other conservative judges would likely overturn such a ban on First Amendment grounds that protect commercial speech, experts note.Less is known about Trump's pick for the Atlanta-based CDC, which develops vaccines and monitors for infectious disease outbreaks.Weldon is a staunch, self-described “pro-life” Republican. Legislation he introduced more than 20 years ago outlawed human cloning. He also brokered a deal with lawmakers to bar patents on human organisms, including genetically engineered embryos. Weldon also advocated against the removal of the feeding tube for Terri Schiavo, a Florida woman whose family battle over her vegetative state turned into a national debate.Weldon's nomination is likely to placate some anti-abortion advocates, who have been concerned about Trump's nomination of Kennedy, a longtime Democrat and proponent of abortion rights, as the nation's top health official.Weldon retired from his congressional seat in 2008, after 14 years in public office. Earlier this year, he lost in a GOP primary for a seat in the Florida Legislature.If he's confirmed, he'll be in charge of more than 13,000 employees and nearly 13,000 other contract workers.Nesheiwat, meanwhile, will oversee 6,000 U.S. Public Health Service Corps members if the Republican-controlled Senate approves her nomination as the surgeon general. She is a medical director for an urgent care company in New York. She appears regularly on Fox News and has expressed frequent support for Trump, sharing photos of them together on her social media pages.Surgeons general also have the power to issue advisories, warning of public health threats in the U.S. Those advisories can influence how the government, public and medical community respond to health crises in the country.

President-elect Donald Trump on Friday nominated Dr. Marty Makary to lead the Food and Drug Administration, selecting a surgeon and author who gained national attention for opposing vaccine mandates and some other public health measures during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Makary, a professor at Johns Hopkins University, is the latest in a string of Trump nominees who have declared the U.S. health system “broken," vowing a shakeup. As part of a flurry of nominations late Friday night, Trump also tapped doctor and former Republican Rep. Dave Weldon of Florida to lead the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Fox News contributor Janette Nesheiwat, meanwhile, is set to be the nation's next surgeon general.

Advertisement

Some of Makary's views align closely with the man who is poised to be his boss — prominent environmental lawyer and anti-vaccine organizer Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whom Trump put forward as the next U.S. Department of Health and Human Services secretary.

In books and articles, Makary has decried the overprescribing of drugs, the use of pesticides on foods and the undue influence of pharmaceutical and insurance companies over doctors and government regulators, points that Kennedy has also harped on for years.

Trump said Makary, trained as a surgeon and cancer specialist, “will restore FDA to the gold standard of scientific research, and cut the bureaucratic red tape at the agency to make sure Americans get the medical cures and treatments they deserve.”

Headquartered in the Maryland suburbs outside Washington, the 18,000 employees of the FDA are responsible for the safety and effectiveness of prescription drugs, vaccines and medical devices as well as a swath of other consumer goods, including food, cosmetics and vaping products. Altogether those products represent an estimated 20% of U.S. consumer spending annually, or $2.6 trillion.

Makary gained prominence on Fox News and other conservative outlets for his contrarian views during the COVID-19 pandemic. He questioned the need for masking and, though not opposed to the COVID-19 vaccine, had concerns about booster vaccinations in young children. He was part of a vocal group of physicians calling for greater emphasis on herd immunity to stop the virus, or the idea that mass infections would quickly lead to population-level protection.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated that COVID-19 vaccinations prevented more than 686,000 U.S. deaths in 2020 and 2021 alone. While children faced much lower rates of hospitalization and death from the virus, medical societies including the American Academy of Pediatrics concluded that vaccinations significantly reduced severe disease in the age group.

Makary has lamented how drugmakers used misleading data to urge doctors to prescribe OxyContin and other opioids as low-risk, non-addictive pain relievers. That marketing was permitted under FDA-approved labeling from the 1990s, suggesting the drugs were safe for common ailments like back pain.

In more recent years, the FDA has come under fire for approving drugs for Alzheimer's, ALS and other conditions based on incomplete data that failed to show meaningful benefits for patients.

A push toward greater scrutiny of drug safety and effectiveness would be a major reversal at FDA, which for decades has focused on speedier drug approvals. That trend has been fueled by industry lobbying and fees paid by drugmakers to help the FDA hire additional reviewers.

Kennedy has proposed ending those payments, which would require billions in new funding from the federal budget.

Other administration priorities would likely run into similar roadblocks. For instance, Kennedy wants to bar drugmakers from advertising on TV, a multibillion-dollar market that supports many TV and cable networks. The Supreme Court and other conservative judges would likely overturn such a ban on First Amendment grounds that protect commercial speech, experts note.

Less is known about Trump's pick for the Atlanta-based CDC, which develops vaccines and monitors for infectious disease outbreaks.

Weldon is a staunch, self-described “pro-life” Republican. Legislation he introduced more than 20 years ago outlawed human cloning. He also brokered a deal with lawmakers to bar patents on human organisms, including genetically engineered embryos. Weldon also advocated against the removal of the feeding tube for Terri Schiavo, a Florida woman whose family battle over her vegetative state turned into a national debate.

Weldon's nomination is likely to placate some anti-abortion advocates, who have been concerned about Trump's nomination of Kennedy, a longtime Democrat and proponent of abortion rights, as the nation's top health official.

Weldon retired from his congressional seat in 2008, after 14 years in public office. Earlier this year, he lost in a GOP primary for a seat in the Florida Legislature.

If he's confirmed, he'll be in charge of more than 13,000 employees and nearly 13,000 other contract workers.

Nesheiwat, meanwhile, will oversee 6,000 U.S. Public Health Service Corps members if the Republican-controlled Senate approves her nomination as the surgeon general. She is a medical director for an urgent care company in New York. She appears regularly on Fox News and has expressed frequent support for Trump, sharing photos of them together on her social media pages.

Surgeons general also have the power to issue advisories, warning of public health threats in the U.S. Those advisories can influence how the government, public and medical community respond to health crises in the country.