
The qualifications for membership also look very different between the existing charter and the renewal issued today. Under the current charter, ACIP members “shall be selected from authorities who are knowledgeable in the fields of immunization practices and public health, have expertise in the use of vaccines and other immunobiologic agents in clinical practice or preventive medicine, have expertise with clinical or laboratory vaccine research, or have expertise in assessment of vaccine efficacy and safety.” Those particular core requirements—expertise in immunization practice and vaccine science—were key to Murphy’s conclusion that Kennedy’s appointees were not fit to serve on the committee.
The renewal notice omits those specific requirements and instead emphasizes a “geographic balance” (representing various regions of the country) and a “balance of specialty areas.” It lists a broad array of specialties that cover a much wider range of medical and scientific disciplines and possibly beyond, including: “biostatistics, toxicology, immunology, epidemiology, pediatrics, internal medicine, family medicine, nursing, consumer issues, state and local health department perspective, academic perspective, public health perspective, etc.”
Suggested changes
Some of the alterations in the renewal may reflect pressure from an anti-vaccine organization aligned with Kennedy. That group, the Informed Consent Action Network (ICAN), is led by Kennedy ally Del Bigtree and has been collaborating with Aaron Siri, an attorney who worked on Kennedy’s unsuccessful presidential bid and has brought numerous lawsuits seeking damages for alleged vaccine injuries. Siri is also known for petitioning the Food and Drug Administration to revoke the polio vaccine.
Last month, ICAN urged Kennedy to amend ACIP’s charter, and Siri’s law firm submitted a draft with track-changed edits outlining their preferred language for the new charter. The draft proposes that ACIP members have expertise in any area “deemed relevant by the Secretary,” and it explicitly requires that “At least two members shall have direct and substantial experience advocating for and/or treating those injured by vaccines.”
The Department of Health and Human Services did not answer Ars Technica’s questions about edits to the renewal notice or possible revisions to the CDC’s full charter text. Spokesperson Andrew Nixon, in an emailed statement, only said the renewal is part of “routine statutory requirements and do not signal any broader policy shift.”

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