Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Sept. 15 named five new members to the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), which advises the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on vaccines.
The new slate includes doctors and researchers who have been critical of the COVID-19 vaccines.
The panel met in June. Its next meeting is scheduled to take place on Sept. 18 and Sept. 19.
Dr. Kirk Milhoan
Milhoan is a pediatric cardiologist at Christus Health System, a senior fellow at the Independent Medical Alliance, an Air Force veteran, and cofounder of a Christian missionary organization called For Hearts and Souls.“I don’t want to make it out like our hospitals are filled with these kids with myocarditis,” he said. “They’re not. But we saw something that was out of the norm. And that should make us curious and go, ‘Boy, they had a low risk. Did we do harm to them?’ And I think for the most part, we did.”
Milhoan said the vaccines should be removed from the market.
“Thousands of children are still getting a vaccine for a virus that really doesn’t cause them significant harm at all and has significant side effects,” he said.
“I’ve never seen a vaccine like this,” he said. “That’s not the basis of vaccines. They shouldn’t have what we would call negative efficacy.”
Dr. Evelyn Griffin
Griffin is an OB-GYN in Louisiana who has said her parents moved the family from Poland to Canada to escape communism. She later moved to the United States.“What concerns me now is what I observe in my patients and my community ... an increase in bizarre and rare conditions in my 20 years of medicine that I have not seen in the past,” she said at the time. “Rashes, tremors, seizures, blood clots, strokes, heart attacks in healthy, young patients.”
Griffin offered to give legislators her cellphone number and analyze any studies they presented to her for conflicts of interest. She also said researchers can skew data to present the findings they want.
“That’s not to say the vaccine is not working,” she said. “I’m just trying to illustrate the point that the results are in the eye of the beholder, and that is what we are seeing here. The statistician that chooses the data to analyze is the beholder.
“The average kid in Louisiana has a higher chance of getting struck by lightning than dying from COVID.”
In 2024, during an event titled Health Freedom Day, Griffin said medical students are taught to memorize the vaccination schedule and not question it.
“Unbeknownst to medical students and most of the public, there’s large involvement in sponsorship of the curriculum that goes into the medical school by big pharma,” she said.
When they graduate and start practicing, doctors trust the organizations, such as the CDC, that form the schedule and other health care policies, according to Griffin. She said she learned through research that there are financial conflicts of interest behind some of the research that undergirds the policies.
She told the crowd that she would advise them to always inquire about the risks, benefits, and alternatives for any medications or procedures.
“If you have a bad feeling about something—the way your doctor’s interacting [with] you, dismissing you, that kind of thing—get a second opinion,” she said.
Catherine Stein
Stein has a doctorate in epidemiology and biostatistics and teaches at Case Western Reserve University.Hillary Blackburn
Blackburn is a pharmacist who is currently the director of medication access and affordability at Ascension, according to her LinkedIn page.Raymond Pollak
Pollak is a transplant surgeon with training in immunology, according to the Health and Human Services Department.Pollak previously served as chief of liver transplantation and director of multi-organ transplant programs at the University of Illinois, the department stated.
He also worked with the United Network for Organ Sharing and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.







