HomeMy WebLinkAbout2022_07_16 SSchumacher_Bad scienceFrom:Stephen Schumacher
Subject:Makary: fearful FDA and CDC insiders ashamed of child-endangering propaganda coming out of their agencies
Date:Monday, July 18, 2022 6:55:23 AM
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https://www.commonsense.news/p/us-public-health-agencies-arent-following
U.S. Public Health Agencies Aren't 'Following the Science,' Officials Say
'People are getting bad advice and we can't say anything.'
<https://substack.com/profile/17323548-marty-makary-md-mph>MartyMakary M.D., M.P.H.
and
<https://substack.com/profile/50246478-tracy-beth-heg-md-phd>Tracy
Beth Høeg M.D., Ph.D.
Jul 14
The calls and text messages are relentless. On
the other end are doctors and scientists at the
top levels of the NIH, FDA and CDC. They are
variously frustrated, exasperated and alarmed
about the direction of the agencies to which they have devoted their careers.
"It's like a horror movie I'm being forced to
watch and I can't close my eyes," one senior FDA
official lamented. "People are getting bad advice and we can't say anything."
That particular FDA doctor was referring to two
recent developments inside the agency. First,
how, with no solid clinical data, the agency
authorized Covid vaccines for infants and
toddlers, including those who already had Covid.
And second, the fact that just months before, the
FDA bypassed their external experts to authorize
<https://www.newsweek.com/why-america-doesnt-trust-cdc-opinion-1713145>boostershots for young children.
That doctor is hardly alone.
At the NIH, doctors and scientists complain to us
about low morale and lower staffing: The NIH's
Vaccine Research Center has had many of its
senior scientists leave over the last year,
including the director, deputy director and chief
medical officer. "They have no leadership right
now. Suddenly there's an enormous number of jobs
opening up at the highest level positions," one
NIH scientist told us. (The people who spoke to
us would only agree to be quoted anonymously,
citing fear of professional repercussions.)
The CDC has experienced a similar exodus."There's been a large amount of turnover. Moraleis low," one high level official at the CDC told
us. "Things have become so political, so what are
we there for?" Another CDC scientist told us: "I
used to be proud to tell people I work at the CDC. Now I'm embarrassed."
Why are they embarrassed? In short, bad science.
The longer answer: that the heads of their
agencies are using weak or flawed data to make
critically important public health decisions.
That such decisions are being driven by what's
politically palatable to people in Washington or
to the Biden administration. And that they have amyopic focus on one virus instead of overall health.
Nowhere has this problem been cleareror the
stakes higherthan on official public health
policy regarding children and Covid.
First, they demanded that young children be
masked in schools. On this score, the agencies
were wrong. Compelling
<https://www.researchsquare.com/article/rs-1773983/v1>studies
later found schools that masked children had no
different rates of transmission. And for socialand linguistic development, children need to see the faces of others.
Next came school closures. The agencies were
wrongand catastrophically so. Poor and minority
children suffered learning loss with an 11-point
<https://www.chalkbeat.org/2021/7/28/22596904/pandemic-covid-school-learning-loss-nwea-mckinsey>drop
in math scores alone and a 20%
<https://emilyoster.net/wp-content/uploads/MS_Updated_Revised.pdf>drop
in math pass rates. There are dozens of statistics of this kind.
Then they ignored natural immunity. Wrong again.
The vast majority of children have already had
Covid, but this has made no difference in theblanket mandates for childhood vaccines. And now,by mandating vaccines and boosters for young
healthy people, with no strong supporting data,
these agencies are only further eroding public trust.
One CDC scientist told us about her shame and
frustration about what happened to American
children during the pandemic: "CDC failed to
balance the risks of Covid with other risks that
come from closing schools," she said. "Learning
loss, mental health exacerbations were obvious
early on and those worsened as the guidance
insisted on keeping schools virtual. CDC guidance
worsened racial equity for generations to come.
It failed this generation of children."
An official at the FDA put it this way: "I can't
tell you how many people at the FDA have told me,'I don't like any of this, but I just need to make it to my retirement.'"
Right now, internal critics of these agencies are
focused on one issue above all: Why did the FDA
and the CDC issue strong blanket recommendations
for Covid vaccines in children?
Three weeks ago, the CDC vigorously recommended
mRNA Covid vaccines for 20 million children under
five years of age. Dr. Rochelle Walensky,
director of the CDC,
<https://www.cdc.gov/about/leadership/director-debriefing.html>declared
that the mRNA Covid vaccines should be given toeveryone six months or older because they are safe and effective.
The trouble is that this sweeping recommendation
was based on extremely weak, inconclusive data provided by Pfizer and Moderna.
Start with Pfizer. Using a three-dose vaccine in
992 children between the ages of six months and
five years, Pfizer found no statistically
significant evidence of vaccine efficacy. In the
subgroup of children aged six months to two
years, the trial found that the vaccine could
result in a 99% lower chance of infectionbut
that they also could have a 370% increased chance
of being infected. In other words, Pfizer<https://www.fda.gov/media/159193/download>reported
a range of vaccine efficacy so wide that no
conclusion could be inferred. No reputable
medical journal would accept such sloppy and
incomplete results with such a small sample size.
More to the point, these results should have
given pause to those who are in charge of public health.
Referring to Pfizer's vaccine efficacy in healthy
young children, one high-level CDC officialwhose
expertise is in the evaluation of clinical
datajoked: "You can inject them with it or
squirt it in their face, and you'll get the same benefit."
Moderna's resultsthey conducted a study on 6,388
children with two doseswere not much better.
Against asymptomatic infections, they claimed a
very weak vaccine
<https://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/coronavirus-covid-19-update-fda-authorizes-moderna-and-
pfizer-biontech-covid-19-vaccines-
children#:%7E:text=For%20the%20Pfizer%2DBioNTech%20COVID,years%20of%20age%20and%20older.>efficacy
of just 4% in children aged six months to two
years. They also claimed an efficacy of 23% in
children between two and six years oldbut
neither result was statistically significant.
Against symptomatic infections, Moderna's vaccine
did show efficacy that was statistically
significant, but the efficacy was low: 50% in
children aged six months to two years, and 42% in
children between two and six years old.
Then there's the matter of how long a vaccine
gives protection. We know from data in adults
that it's generally a matter of months. But we
have no such data for young children.
"It seems criminal that we put out the
recommendation to give mRNA Covid vaccines to
babies without good data. We really don't know
what the risks are yet. So why push it so hard?"
a CDC physician added. A high-level FDA official
felt the same way: "The public has no idea how
bad this data really is. It would not pass muster for any other authorization."
And yet, the FDA and the CDC pushed it through.That slap in the face of science may explain why
<https://www.cnn.com/2022/07/07/politics/covid-19-vaccine-children-under-5/index.html>only
2% of parents of children under age five have
chosen to get the Covid vaccine, and 40% of
parents in rural areas say their pediatricians
<https://www.kff.org/coronavirus-covid-19/poll-finding/kff-covid-19-vaccine-monitor-winter-2021-update-on-
parents-views-of-vaccines/>did
not recommend the Covid vaccine for their child.
----------
This isn't the first time that Covid vaccinesrecommendations based on scant evidence have beenpushed through these agencies.
Most recently, back in May, the lack of clinical
evidence for booster shots in young people
created a stir at the FDA. The White House
promoted it hard even before FDA regulators had
seen any data. Once they saw the data, they
weren't impressed. It
<https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2115926>showed
no clear benefit against severe disease for people under 40.
The FDA's two top vaccine regulatorsDr. MarionGruber, director of the FDA's vaccine office, andher deputy director, Dr. Philip Krausequit the
agency last year over political pressure to
authorize vaccine boosters in young people. After
their departure they wrote scathing commentaries
explaining why the data did not support a broad
booster authorization,
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2021/11/29/booster-shots-universal-opinion/>arguing
in the Washington Post that "the push for
boosters for everyone could actually prolong the
pandemic," citing concerns that boosting based on
an outdated variant could be counterproductive.
"It felt like we were a political tool" a CDC
scientist told us about the issue. That insider
went on to explain that he got vaccinated early
but chose not to get boosted based on the data.
Ironically, that person was unable to go on atrip with a group of parents because proof ofbeing boosted was required. "I asked for someone
to show me the data. They said the policy was based on the CDC recommendation."
As one NIH scientist told us: "There's a silence,
an unwillingness for agency scientists to say
anything. Even though they know that some of
what's being said out of the agency is absurd."
That was a theme we heard over and over
againpeople felt like they couldn't speak
freely, even internally within their agencies.
"You get labeled based on what you say. If you
talk about it you will suffer, I'm convinced," anFDA staffer told us. Another person at thatagency added: "If you speak honestly, you get treated differently."
And so they remain quiet, speaking to each other
in private or in text groups on Signal.
One subject these doctors and scientists feel
passionately about but feel they cannot bring up
is natural immunity. Why, they wonder, are we
insisting on immunizing children who already have
some immunity to the disease due to having contracted Covid?
As of February,<https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/71/wr/mm7117e3.htm>75%
of children in the U.S. already had natural
immunity from prior infection. It could easily be
over 90% of children today given how ubiquitous
Omicron has been since then. The CDC's
<https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/71/wr/mm7101a4.htm?s_cid=mm7101a4_w>own
research shows that natural immunity is better
than vaccinated immunity and a recent New England
Journal of Medicine
<https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2118946>study
from Israel has questioned the benefits of
vaccinating previously infected persons. Manycountries have long credited natural immunitytowards vaccine mandates. But not the U.S.
In this, the leaders of these American health
agencies made the U.S. an international outlier
in how it treats children. Sweden never offered
vaccination to children under 12. Finland limits
Covid vaccines to children under 12 who are at
high risk. The Norwegian Institute of Public
Health has
appropriately<https://www.fhi.no/en/publ/information-letters/coronavirus-vaccine-for-children-5-11-years/>
stated that "some children may benefit" but
"previous infection offers as good of protection
as the vaccine against reinfection." Denmark
announced on June 22 that its recommendation to
vaccinate any children under age 16 was a
mistake. "The vaccinations were not predominantly
recommended for the child's sake but to ensurepandemic control,"<https://nyheder.tv2.dk/samfund/2022-06-22-set-i-bakspejlet-fik-vi-ikke-meget-ud-af-at-vaccinere-boernene-
erkender-brostroem?cid=_soco%3Atw%3A4%3Anews%3A%3A%3A>said
Søren Brostrøm, head of the Danish Ministry of Health.
----------
It is statistically impossible for everyone who
works inside of our health agencies to have 100%
agreement about such a new and knotty subject.
The fact that there is no public dissent or
debate can only be explained by the fact that
they areor at least feel that they arebeing muzzled.
It is an ancient, moral requirement of ourprofession to speak up when we believe
questionable treatments are being proposed. It is
also good for the public. Imagine, for example, a
world in which those scientists who suggested
that masking for children and school lockdowns
were worse for public health were not smeared but instead debated?
The official public health response to Covid has
undermined the public's belief in public health
itself. This is a terrible outcome with
potentially disastrous consequences. For one
thing, because of these sloppy and politicized
policies, we run the risk of parents rejectingroutine vaccines for their childrenones we knoware safe, effective and life-saving.
The leaders of the CDC, the FDA and the NIH
should welcome internal discussioneven
dissensionbased on the evidence. Silencing
physicians is not "following the science." Less
absolutism and more humility by the men and women
running our public health agencies would go a
long way in rebuilding public trust.
Dr. Marty Makary is a professor at the JohnsHopkins School of Medicine, the author of<https://www.amazon.com/Price-We-Pay-American-Care/dp/1635575915/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?
_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=>The
Price We Pay, and a medical advisor to Virginia
Governor Glenn Youngkin. Dr. Tracy Beth Høeg is
an epidemiologist affiliated with The Florida
Department of Health who has published research
on Covid-19 in schools in the CDC's journal MMWR.