The federal public health agency no longer recommends COVID-19 vaccination for pregnant women.
Pregnant women can still get COVID-19 vaccines, even after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stopped recommending the shots during pregnancy, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. told members of Congress on June 24.
โWeโre not depriving anybody of choice. If a pregnant woman wants the COVID-19 vaccine, she can get it,โ Kennedy said. โ[We are] no longer recommending it because there was no science supporting that recommendation.โ
Kennedy announced on May 27 that the CDC would stop recommending the COVID-19 vaccination for pregnant women, a change after years of the agency advising vaccination during pregnancy. The updated adult immunization schedule does not contain a recommendation for pregnant women to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, although all other adults are advised to take one.
A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services told The Epoch Times in an email that health agencies โencourage individuals to talk with their healthcare provider about any personal medical decision.โ
Kennedy said on Tuesday that multiple studies have identified adverse events following COVID-19 vaccination, including miscarriage.
A preprint paper recently released online concluded that in Israel, women who were vaccinated early in their pregnancy experienced more fetal losses than expected. The paperโs authors include Retsef Levi, a professor who Kennedy has named to the CDCโs vaccine advisory panel.
โThereโs no safety data for it, so weโre not going to recommend it to people when we donโt have safety data,โ Kennedy said.
Kennedy was answering Rep. Robin Kelly (D-N.Y.), who had entered into the record statements by some medical groups critical of the change.