In court, AAP argues Kennedy's HHS made unlawful changes to vaccine policies
BOSTON After a full day of oral arguments in a packed courtroom, Boston federal judge Brian E. Murphy did not rule from the bench on a lawsuit from the American Academy of Pediatrics, the professional body representing the countrys pediatricians, against the Department of Health and Human Services, focused on vaccines.
The judge asked for more information before he decides on the legality of changes to the childhood vaccine schedule and to the federal committee that advises on vaccine recommendations. Murphy asked the governments lawyers to respond to declarations that the plaintiffs submitted the evening before the hearing including a declaration from immediate past AAP president Susan Kressley. Murphy asked that the DOJ submit its response by the end of the day Wednesday.
The suit was filed in federal district court in Boston after Kennedy announced via a video posted on X that Covid vaccines would be removed from the childhood immunization schedule. The scope of the suit has since expanded to include challenges to Kennedys reconstitution of the panel that advises the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on vaccines, as well as to the pared down vaccine schedule published in January.
The AAP, along with other medical and public health groups and three anonymous women, accused the Trump administration of violating the Administrative Procedures Act, which lays out how the government should make policy changes. The plaintiffs argue that the changes were arbitrary and capricious, meaning that sufficient care was not taken to understand the repercussions of its actions.
https://www.statnews.com/2026/02/13/rfk-jr-vaccine-lawsuit-pediatricians-challenge-acip-policy-changes/