Trump picks Jay Bhattacharya, who backed COVID herd immunity, to lead
National Institutes of Health
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[November 27, 2024]
By CARLA K. JOHNSON
President-elect Donald Trump has chosen health economist Dr. Jay
Bhattacharya, a critic of pandemic lockdowns and vaccine mandates, to
lead the National Institutes of Health, the nation's leading medical
research agency.
Trump, in a statement Tuesday evening, said Bhattacharya, a 56-year-old
physician and professor at Stanford University School of Medicine, will
work in cooperation with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., his pick to lead the
Department of Health and Human Services, "to direct the Nation’s Medical
Research, and to make important discoveries that will improve Health,
and save lives.”
“Together, Jay and RFK Jr. will restore the NIH to a Gold Standard of
Medical Research as they examine the underlying causes of, and solutions
to, America’s biggest Health challenges, including our Crisis of Chronic
Illness and Disease," he wrote.
The decision to choose Bhattacharya for the post is yet another reminder
of the ongoing impact of the COVID pandemic on the politics on public
health.
Bhattacharya was one of three authors of the Great Barrington
Declaration, an October 2020 open letter maintaining that lockdowns were
causing irreparable harm.
The document — which came before the availability of COVID-19 vaccines
and during the first Trump administration — promoted “herd immunity,”
the idea that people at low risk should live normally while building up
immunity to COVID-19 through infection. Protection should focus instead
on people at higher risk, the document said.
“I think the lockdowns were the single biggest public health mistake,”
Bhattacharya said in March 2021 during a panel discussion convened by
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.
The Great Barrington Declaration was embraced by some in the first Trump
administration, even as it was widely denounced by disease experts.
Then- NIH director Dr. Francis Collins called it dangerous and “not
mainstream science.”
His nomination would need to be approved by the Senate.
Trump on Tuesday also announced that Jim O’Neill, a former HHS official,
will serve as deputy secretary of the sprawling agency. Trump said
O’Neill “will oversee all operations and improve Management,
Transparency, and Accountability to, Make America Healthy Again,” the
president-elect announced.
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President-elect Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with the House
GOP conference, Nov. 13, 2024, in Washington. (Allison Robbert/Pool
via AP, File)
O’Neill is the only one of Trump’s
health picks so far who brings previous experience working inside
the bureaucracy to the job. Trump’s previous choices to lead public
health agencies — including Kennedy, Dr. Mehmet Oz for Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services administrator and Dr. Marty Makary
for Food and Drug Administration commissioner — have all been
Washington outsiders who are vowing to shake up the agencies.
Bhattacharya, who faced restrictions on social media platforms
because of his views, was also a plaintiff in Murthy v. Missouri, a
Supreme Court case contending that federal officials improperly
suppressed conservative views on social media as part of their
efforts to combat misinformation. The Supreme Court sided with the
Biden administration in that case.
After Elon Musk acquired Twitter in 2022, he invited Bhattacharya to
the company's headquarters to learn more about how his views had
been restricted on the platform, which Musk renamed X. More
recently, Bhattacharya has posted on X about scientists leaving the
site and joining the alternative site Bluesky, mocking Bluesky as
"their own little echo chamber.”
Bhattacharya has argued that vaccine mandates that barred
unvaccinated people from activities and workplaces undermined
Americans' trust in the public health system.
He is a former research fellow at the Hoover Institution and an
economist at the RAND Corporation.
The National Institutes of Health falls under HHS, which Trump has
nominated Kennedy to oversee. The NIH's $48 billion budget funds
medical research on vaccines, cancer and other diseases through
competitive grants to researchers at institutions across the nation.
The agency also conducts its own research with thousands of
scientists working at NIH labs in Bethesda, Maryland.
Among advances that were supported by NIH money are a medication for
opioid addiction, a vaccine to prevent cervical cancer, many new
cancer drugs and the speedy development of mRNA COVID-19 vaccines.
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Associated Press writers Jill Colvin and Amanda Seitz contributed to
this report.
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