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The U.S. will no longer contribute funding to Gavi, a global alliance that helps buy vaccines for the world's poorest children, because it ignores safety, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said ...
Gavi, the vaccine provider for the world’s poorest people, needs an extra US$3 billion to protect infants and other ...
The Trump administration is ending U.S. support for immunizations abroad because of its opposition not only to foreign aid, ...
It costs nearly $100 million a year to maintain global stockpiles of vaccines for Ebola, cholera, meningitis and yellow fever ...
The health secretary zeroed in on the COVID-19 vaccine, which WHO, Gavi and other health authorities have recommended for pregnant women, saying they are at higher risk of severe disease.
He claimed that Gavi had “ignored the science” about vaccine safety. He had already dismissed all seventeen members of the C.D.C.’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, before saying that his ...
Kennedy, a longtime vaccine skeptic, mentioned Gavi's partnership with the World Health Organization during COVID-19, accusing them of silencing “dissenting views” and “legitimate questions ...
The World Health Organization (WHO), with support from Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, has distributed over 800 motorbikes to the country's Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) to improve healthcare ...
Gavi said in a statement that safety was key, and it acts in line with World Health Organization recommendations. It has full confidence in the DTPw vaccine, which has contributed to halving child ...
The health secretary zeroed in on the COVID-19 vaccine, which WHO, Gavi and other health authorities have recommended for pregnant women, saying they are at higher risk of severe disease.
The health secretary zeroed in on the COVID-19 vaccine, which WHO, Gavi and other health authorities have recommended for pregnant women, saying they are at higher risk of severe disease.