Trump Administration Plans Not To Recommend COVID-19 Vaccines For Pregnant People, Teenagers, and Children: WSJ

Trump Administration Plans Not To Recommend COVID-19 Vaccines For Pregnant People, Teenagers, and Children: WSJ

In the coming days, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is poised to announce that the Department of Health and Human Services will no longer recommend COVID-19 vaccines for children and pregnant people, according to reporting from The Wall Street Journal.

“Something just happened that’s really special,” Leland Lehrman, the Executive Director of a new Make America Healthy Again-affiliated think tank called the MAHA Institute, told attendees at a daylong event for the Institute on Thursday. “I was asked to please make this announcement,” he continued, according to STAT.

“You might’ve already heard, but today the secretary is announcing that HHS and the CDC are going to stop recommending routine COVID shots for children and pregnant women.” The room applauded. Lehrman said, laughing, “That’s good! That’s really good.”

The MAHA Institute, officially launched this week, is the latest spinoff group by Kennedy supporters. According to STAT, the first event for the group featured a crowd including “numerous figures with controversial views, including proponents of raw milk, union leaders against vaccine mandates, and psychiatrists who want to wean patients off of mental health drugs.”

HHS halting the long-held recommendation for children over 6 months old and pregnant people to get one of the approved COVID vaccines is the latest example of the department, stewarded by RFK Jr., opting for skeptical messaging around vaccine efficacy and safety.

Spokespeople for HHS, the CDC, and the White House didn’t immediately respond to the WSJ‘s requests for comment. STAT also attempted to reach HHS for comment.

Sign offering COVID19m vaccines

A pharmacy advertises the COVID-19 vaccine as the nation marks the fifth anniversary of the COVID-19 pandemic on March 13, 2025 in New York City.

Spencer Platt/Getty Images

The Health Department’s expected move to stop recommending the COVID vaccine to pregnant people, teenagers, and children could further endanger immunocompromised people across the nation, according to Richard Hughes, a lawyer and vaccine advocate. Doing so would “have a behavioral impact on whether people choose to get vaccinated,” he told the WSJ. If HHS is no longer recommending routine vaccinations for COVID for these groups, insurance companies “will no longer have to cover these vaccines,” Dorit Reiss, a law professor who studies the anti-vaccine movement, said to STAT’s Isabella Cueto.

Kennedy, before and after joining President Donald Trump’s administration, continuously spreads misinformation about vaccines, amplifies anti-science solutions to medical ailments, and sows doubt about widely used vaccines, including those to protect against coronaviruses In 2021, RFK Jr. asked the federal government to revoke its emergency authorization of all COVID vaccines, filing a citizen petition on behalf of Children’s Health Defense, a Kennedy-founded group that advocates against the recommended vaccine schedule for children.

Since taking on the role as Health Secretary, following his failed presidential campaign, Kennedy and his department have tried to discredit the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention research which found that increases in autism diagnoses are largely due to broader screening and identification of people in “previously underidentified groups,” and not, as RFK Jr. has advanced, due to the MMR vaccine. In March, the CDC rolled back $11.4 billion in funds for state and community health programs that, in part, include immunizations and vaccines for children. And, in May, announced that all new vaccines would need to undergo placebo testing—a requirement that is likely to delay the availability of certain vaccines and complicate the process of getting vaccines approved.

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