Dr. Dave Weldon, a former republican representative and election of President Trump, conducting the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, will appear on Thursday before the Senate Health Committee, for the first time the agency director was subject to confirmation.
71 -year -old Dr. Weldon is probably the least known of men nominated for the main agencies in the Health and Social Welfare Department. But he is the most strictly compatible with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a novel health secretary in the country.
Dr. Weldon, like Mr. Kennedy, has long questioned the safety of some vaccines, and they both maintained a 25-year relationship. The Secretary of Health quoted the criticism of Dr. Weldon’s CDC along with his own.
Dr. Weldon served in Congress for 14 years, in 1995–2009. His signing legislative achievement was Weldon’s amendment, which Bary health agencies from discrimination against hospitals or health insurance plans that decide not to provide or pay for abortions.
He also claimed that abstinence is the most effective way to limit sexually transmitted infections. Cases have increased in recent years and began to be equated only in 2023.
Listening to Dr. Weldon takes place among the significant epidemics of the Oder in Texas and Novel Mexico, which infected over 250 people and consumed two life; flu time that led to a record number of hospitalizations; and the potential of the bird epidemic.
He will probably face arduous questions about his views on the Odra vaccine, whose safety he has repeatedly questioned, and on the CDC itself, which he strongly criticized for not doing enough to prove that vaccines are unthreatening.
During his stay in the congress, Dr. Weldon pressed Slide the vaccine security office Away from CDC control, saying that the agency had a conflict of interest because it buys and promotes vaccines.
In an interview with the Novel York Times at the end of November Dr. Weldon said that he worked “on pulling mercury from childhood vaccines”, but described as a supporter of vaccination.
He said that both his adult children were fully immunized. As a doctor in coastal Florida, he prescribes thousands of flu doses and other vaccines to his patients.
“I was described as anti-fed,” said Dr. Weldon, but added: “I make arrows. I believe in vaccination. “
Members of the Senate Commission for Health, Education, Work and Retirement also questioned Kennedy – whom they later supported – as well as Dr. Jayanta Bhattachary and Dr. Marta Makara, relevant nominees for managing the National Institutes of Health and Food and Drug Administration.
(Experience for Dr. Mehmet OZ, nominated for running Medicare and Medicaid Services centers, is scheduled for Friday).
In addition to a handful of arduous questions from the chairman of the committee, Senator Bill Cassidy, a republican of Louisiana, members’ comments have largely fell towards bias. It is not expected that the interrogation of Dr. Weldon will be different.
Senator Cassida, who is a doctor, can press Dr. Weldon on the employ of vaccine against hepatitis B, which is given to children from birth.
Dr. Weldon, like Mr. Kennedy, questioned the need to immunize children against hepatitis B, describing them primarily as a sexually transmitted disease.