Trump Attempts To EO America Into Mimicking Denmark’s Vaccination Schedules
from the america-isn't-denmark dept
Back in January of this year, RFK Jr. clearly strong armed the CDC into changing the childhood vaccination schedules in America to mimic those of Denmark. The public messaging was crafted to sound as reasonable as possible and amounted to a claim that America was going to revise vaccination schedules to match those of another successful, industrialized, peer country. There were a couple of problems with the move.
For starters, Kennedy did his usual move of trying to make this change completely outside of the normal process for such things. There was no indication that any of this was done at the behest of his reformed ACIP panel. It didn’t go through the normal scientific checks and balances. And even if it had, the courts later put a stay on all such changes, because Kennedy didn’t follow the American Procedure Act in either those revised schedules or even the formation of ACIP itself. The Trump administration has appealed that decision.
The other main issue with the change was the obvious one: America is not Denmark. Calling Denmark a peer nation to America is laughable for many reasons. As one Danish official pointed out at the time: Denmark has a homogeneous population, universal free healthcare, lower serious outcomes from infectious diseases that they don’t vaccinate for, and a population that actually largely trusts government institutions. America doesn’t have any of that, in large part because the party of Trump doesn’t want us to have it.
Donald Trump doesn’t know how to take an “L”, though, so of course he simply picked up a pen recently and is attempting to executive order his way to trying to change those same vaccination schedules.
While the federal government is appealing that injunction, the new executive order on Friday reaffirms Kennedy’s plans to adopt Denmark’s strategy, calling for “realigning” US vaccine policy with “best practices from peer, developed countries.”It states that the scientific assessment written by Høeg and Kulldorff is a “guiding resource for the Federal Government” and that the CDC shall ” take any appropriate steps to update the United States childhood and adolescent vaccine schedule.”
As before, the AMA is strongly against the unilateral change made without backing from scientific evidence.
“Altering [the vaccine schedule] without clear, evidence-based justification risks continued confusion for parents and patients, undermining trust in vaccines, and ultimately lowering vaccination rates,” Mukkamala said. “That would put more children and communities at risk of preventable illness.”
The American Medical Association (AMA) wasn’t the only one to come out against this top-down edict. The American College of Physicians (ACP) likewise pushed back on the EO publicly, stating unequivocally that it must not be implemented or there would be severe negative health outcomes for American children.
As did, hilariously, scientists in Denmark itself.
Anders Hviid, who leads research on vaccine safety and effectiveness at the Statens Serum Institut, Denmark’s equivalent of the CDC, told The New York Times in December that it did not make sense to compare the US to Denmark. “It’s not at all fair to say look at Denmark unless you can match the other characteristics of Denmark,” he said.
Hviid also told the Times that the US public health policies under Kennedy “get crazier and crazier” by the month. “It is surreal, and it is difficult, from a Danish perspective, to understand what’s going on.”
Trust me, dear Anders, it’s difficult to understand from within the American borders, too.
Now, neither Trump nor Kennedy give a flying damn about Denmark, of course. That much is obvious to anyone with a working frontal cortex. The country’s vaccination schedules are merely being used as a prop to reduce the vaccination schedules for American children because that’s all Kennedy really wants. Over the objections, it turns out, of Danish scientists themselves.
I’m sure the AMA, ACP, or the American Academy of Pediatricians (AAP) will be filing lawsuits over this Executive Order. And I see no reason why the courts shouldn’t put a hold on its implementation, as it did to Kennedy.
But the real mystery is why the do-nothings in Congress just can’t be bothered to push back directly on all of this.
Filed Under: acip, cdc, denmark, donald trump, health & human services, rfk jr., vaccine schedules, vaccines
Techdirt is off for the holiday! We'll be back with our regular posts this weekend.


Comments on “Trump Attempts To EO America Into Mimicking Denmark’s Vaccination Schedules”
-> But the real mystery is why the do-nothings in Congress just can’t be bothered to push back directly on all of this.
I would guess the majority of them have their collective heads so far up Trumps ass their brains are starved for oxygen.
Next, Trump will EO smoking and the Quarter Pounder diet. For children.
“But the real mystery is why the do-nothings in Congress just can’t be bothered to push back directly on all of this.”
Because they know who cuts their paychecks. It’s elementary, Watson.
Re: Because they know who cuts their paychecks.
The American people?
Re: Re:
More specifically, American people who aren’t kicking their asses to the curb.
Trump can’t compare the US to Denmark. Denmark has lots of things that the US will never have.
Like, Greenland.
“American Procedure Act”
Administrative Procedure Act (APA)?
All too understandable sadly...
But the real mystery is why the do-nothings in Congress just can’t be bothered to push back directly on all of this.
Oh that’s simple enough to explain, it’s a mix of cowardice and complicity.
On the one hand you’ve got those that might personally object to what’s being done but who have decided that keeping their cushy non-jobs is more important than the hundreds of millions of lives of everyone else in the country and therefore stay silent, and on the other hand you’ve got those that look at the legislative, legal and literal carnage taking place and love it because it’s not like anyone that matters is being harmed but plenty of people they hate are.
Re:
That and the stochastic terrorism. Marge Taylor-Greene gave him some mild pushback and she quit three months later because she couldn’t take the heat she got for it.
Point of order: the madman DOES want use to have the “homogeneous population”. I vote we skip out on being like Denmark in that particular way.
Also: I thought the MAGA rhetoric involved the US being a “world leader”. However “lets do what Denmark is doing” is indicative that you are not great enough to be doing better than Denmark.
Would it help if US do invade Greenland, to be more like Denmark?
I don’t know, I’m just throwing random stupid ideas since it’s the only ones that seem to be adopted.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
You retards never acknowledge this when it comes to fiscal or social policies. But obviously you know this fact exists, and is way MORE important in fiscal and social policies.
Anyway, vaccines are good but mandating them is bad, fuck off.
You don’t get to decide what others do with their bodies, remember?
Re:
That’s rich, coming from someone on the side of lawmakers who would absolutely ban all abortion nationwide (and therefore make rape a viable reproductive strategy) if they could.
Re:
Selective memory is one hell of a drug as you just proved. You just can’t remember inconvenient facts, can you?
Re:
You don’t get to decide what others do with their bodies, remember?
Yeah, I remember Asshole. And the last time I looked, there’s plenty of red states doing EXACTLY that. But I’m not holding a grudge – want to play chicken with disease? By all means, Goober, go for it. Don’t get vaccinated, don’t wear masks, and spread it far and wide amongst yourselves.
Just promise me that for the next pandemic, you horse-dewormer eating motherfuckers PROVE your patriotism by dropping fucking dead instead of clogging up ventilators with people we’d be better off without.
Re: Re:
I wonder if health insurers will, or already have, sneak in a clause that voids the insurance for the unvaccinated when it comes to diseases that has a vaccine.
So far, the plague bearers have largely dumped the cost of their stupidity on others, both monetarily, health wise and the loss of life.
Re:
Eat shit, plague rat.
Re:
Withholding vaccines from kids is abuse.
The Lysenkoism will continue until morale improves.
The guy really wants to make Greenland happen.
Is it, though?
Re:
Well, I doubt anyone in the Trump administration understands any of this.