Louisiana to end mass vaccine promotion, state's top health official
says
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[February 14, 2025]
By JACK BROOK
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The Louisiana Department of Health “will no longer
promote mass vaccination” according to a Thursday memo written by the
state's top health official and obtained by The Associated Press.
A department spokesperson confirmed Louisiana Surgeon General Ralph
Abraham had ordered his staff to stop engaging in media campaigns and
community health fairs to encourage vaccinations, even as the state has
experienced a surge in influenza.
Abraham's announcement occurred the same day vaccine skepticRobert F.
Kennedy Jr. was sworn in by the U.S. Senate to serve as President Donald
Trump's health secretary.
In a separate letter posted on the department's website, Louisiana's
surgeon general decried “blanket government mandates” for vaccines and
criticized the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's COVID-19
vaccination push. Individuals should make their own decisions about
vaccinations, Abraham said.
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“Government should admit the limitations of its role in people’s lives
and pull back its tentacles from the practice of medicine,” said
Abraham, a Republican.
The department will still “stock and provide vaccines," according to
Abraham's memo.
Jennifer Herricks, founder of the advocacy group Louisiana Families for
Vaccines, said she feared that the new directive would lead to an
increase in preventable illnesses and deaths.
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Medical personnel vaccinate students at a school in New Orleans on
Jan. 25, 2022. (AP Photo/Ted Jackson, File)
 “We are very concerned for people in
Louisiana who have historically depended on vaccination drives to
get easily accessible vaccines that are no longer going to be
available,” Herricks said.
In liberal New Orleans, the city council passed a resolution
Thursday vowing to continue supporting vaccination efforts.
The city's Health Department Director Jennifer Avegno said
state-supported efforts have led thousands of people to receive
vaccines in the past. However, she anticipates vaccination rates for
preventable diseases will drop due to the state's new policy and
misinformation promoted by the surgeon general's letter. She pointed
out that vaccines are most effective when they are widespread.
“Public health is really united on this issue: For more than a
century, vaccines of all kinds have been a cornerstone of improving
public health in America,” Avegno told the city council on Thursday.
“There’s not scientific debate on this, this is as close as you can
get to established fact that vaccinations, particularly mass
vaccinations, and community immunity, saves millions and millions of
lives.”
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