Tag: Gen

  • Louisiana Surgeon Gen explains reasons for ending statewide mass vaccinations

    Louisiana Surgeon Gen explains reasons for ending statewide mass vaccinations

    Louisiana’s surgeon general, Dr. Ralph Abraham, said his goal was to get politics out of medicine and improve patients’ informed consent when he decided to issue a directive ending mass vaccination programs in his state.

    Critics have decried Abraham’s directive as anti-science and hyper-political, while also arguing it could further hamper an already overburdened health sector. Others have suggested the move will actually serve to decrease confidence in public health rather than improve it, as Abraham foresees. 

    But, he argues, the move is a critical step toward keeping patients in control of their healthcare, and serves to “depoliticize medicine” rather than further politicize it. 

    TRUMP SIGNS EXECUTIVE ORDER TO BLOCK FEDERAL MONEY FOR SCHOOLS, UNIVERSITIES WITH COVID VACCINE MANDATES

    “In my opinion, it is probably not the best thing to just simply go into a herd mentality – just line up – and get a shot,” Abraham said during an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital. “Why would somebody want to do that when they can have that conversation? If you have these mass vaccination events, it takes away that patient-doctor relationship because that conversation then never happens.”

    Fox News Digital spoke to Louisiana Surgeon General Dr. Ralph Abraham about his recent move to end statewide mass vaccination programs in an effort to improve patients’ informed consent. (Fox News Digital)

    Following the announcement of the new directive, a group of Louisiana medical associations accused Abraham of politicizing vaccines. However, Abraham countered that these criticisms were unfounded.

    “People say, ‘Well, you’re putting politics into medicine.’ No. Politics was in medicine from the get-go, starting with COVID,” Abraham said. “My job and my role and my desire is to depoliticize medicine. And the way you do that is to get that patient and that doctor on a one-on-one.”

    RFK JR’S HEALTH AGENDA GAINS POPULARITY AMONG STATE LAWMAKERS 

    covid vaccination area in san diego

    Attendees enter the COVID vaccination and negative test verification area before being allowed to enter Comic-Con International in San Diego, California, on July 23, 2022. (Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images)

    Abraham, the state’s first surgeon general, ordered his staff last week to stop engaging in media campaigns, community health fairs and other mass vaccination efforts that encourage people to get vaccinated without any prior consultation with a doctor. 

    The move garnered backlash, including from GOP Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy, a physician himself. Cassidy said that Abraham’s order was ignoring “the reality of people’s lives,” arguing events like vaccine fairs “keep a child from having to miss school and a mother from having to miss work.”

    “To say that cannot occur and that someone must wait for the next available appointment ignores that reality,” Cassidy argued. 

    RFK JR. SAYS HEALTH CRISIS ISN’T JUST PHYSICAL, BUT SPIRITUAL

    Other critics who spoke to ABC News suggested Abraham’s directive aimed, in part, at restoring confidence that has been lost in public health, will serve to continue to diminish it. They also argue that in an industry that has a shortage of healthcare workers, getting rid of mass vaccination programs could actually serve to overburden the industry even more, and potentially cost lives.

    Cassidy and RFK Jr

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. talks with Sen. Bill Cassidy following his confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill, Jan. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey Jr.)

    But Abraham said his critics were “cherry-picking what they want to fuss about.”

    “If you look at the overall picture that we presented – if they argue with just good common sense, and if they argue with wanting to get that patient-doctor relationship back to where it’s supposed to be, then, you know, they’re just not debating in a very fair and logical manner.”

    A former member of Congress and supporter of newly confirmed Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Abraham said he was “in no form or fashion” anti-vaccine. He added that as a family medicine physician he “always” recommends childhood immunizations, and called the Tetanus vaccine “life-saving.”

    BIRD FLU VACCINE GETS ‘CONDITIONAL LICENSE’ FROM USDA, COMPANY ANNOUNCES

    “There are some vaccines that are good for most people. There are some vaccines that are good for some people. There are some vaccines that are good for a few people. And there are some vaccines that are good for no one,” Abraham said.

    JYNNEOS mpox vaccine is pulled into a syringe

    A healthcare worker prepares a dose of the monkeypox vaccine at a pop-up vaccination clinic in Los Angeles on Aug. 9, 2022. (Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images)

    When asked about how he would respond to critics who would call his and Kennedy’s skeptical views on vaccines anti-science, Abraham said, “I would love to debate them.”

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    “I have science on my side that shows that these things that they are saying work certainly do not work [the way they claim],” Abraham said. “This statement we came out with – that LDH has done – it has certainly promoted conversation about these issues. That’s a good thing.”

    Abraham told Fox News Digital that the move will not impact vaccine distribution in the state and the Louisiana Department of Health will still provide them as they have in the past. He also said the move will help clear up limited resources.

  • EXCLUSIVE: Gen. Milley to lose security detail and clearance

    EXCLUSIVE: Gen. Milley to lose security detail and clearance

    EXCLUSIVE: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth will announce he is “immediately pulling” retired Gen. Mark Milley’s personal security detail and security clearance, multiple senior administration officials tell Fox News. 

    The secretary is also directing the new acting Inspector General to conduct a review board to determine if enough evidence exists for Gen. Milley to be stripped of a star in retirement based on his actions to “undermine the chain of command” during President Donald Trump’s first term, officials say. 

    The Pentagon will also be removing a second portrait of Gen. Milley inside the Pentagon. This one is from the Army’s Marshall Corridor on the third floor honoring his service as chief-of-staff of the Army. Fox is told the removal of this second portrait will take place as soon as tonight. This means there will be no more portraits of Gen. Milley inside the Pentagon. 

    The first portrait of Gen. Milley, from his time as the U.S. military’s top officer, was removed from the Pentagon last week on Inauguration Day less than two hours after President Trump was sworn into office. 

    TRUMP REVOKES SECURITY CLEARANCES OF 51 INTEL OFFICIALS WHO SIGNED DISCREDITED HUNTER BIDEN LAPTOP LETTER

    The now retired Gen. Milley and other former senior Trump aides had been assigned personal security details ever since Iran vowed revenge for the killing of Qasem Soleimani in a drone strike in 2020 ordered by Trump in his first term.

    FILE – Retired Army Gen. Mark Milley served as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. (AP/Jeremias Gonzalez)

    On “Fox News Sunday,” the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Tom Cotton said he hoped President Trump would “revisit” the decision to pull the protective security details from John Bolton, Mike Pompeo and Brian Hook who previously served under Trump.

    Asked why these actions were being taken, a senior administration official who requested anonymity replied, “There is a new era of accountability in the Defense Department under President Trump’s leadership—and that’s exactly what the American people expect.”

    Gen. Milley served as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff from 2019 to 2023 under both Presidents Trump and Biden.

    BIDEN PARDONS MARK MILLEY, ANTHONY FAUCI, J6 COMMITTEE MEMBERS

    Milley Biden

    FILE – Milley served under President Joe Biden and Trump. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

    He served as the Army’s chief of staff, the service’s top officer, from 2015-2019. 

    In his new book “War,” Bob Woodward writes Gen. Milley told him at a reception at the Willard Hotel in Washington, D.C. on March 6, 2023, that he believed Trump was “fascist to the core!”

    Gen. Milley was still serving in uniform as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff when he reportedly made the remark.

    Trump and Milley

    FILE – Former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Army Gen. Mark Milley met with President Donald Trump and other senior military leaders at the White House in Washington, Oct. 7, 2019.  (REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque)

    Milley portrait in the Pentagon

    FILE – A portrait of former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, retired U.S. Army General Mark A. Milley, was unveiled at the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, Jan. 10, 2025.  (DoD/U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. Jack Sanders/Handout via REUTERS)

    Woodward wrote that Gen. Milley, “shared with me his worries about Trump’s mental stability and control of nuclear weapons,” in a previous book.

    When the leader of ISIS was killed in a daring raid carried out by U.S. Special Operations Forces in Syria in October 2019, President Trump praised Milley. 

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    “I want to thank General Mark Milley and our Joint Chiefs of Staff, and I also want to thank our professionals who work in other agencies of the United States government and were critical to the mission’s unbelievable success.”

    Before leaving office, President Joe Biden pardoned Gen. Milley. 

    In their book, “Peril,” Bob Woodward and Robert Costa wrote that Gen. Milley called his Chinese counterpart on two occasions in the final months of Trump’s first term, warning him the U.S. military had no plans to strike China in a bid to avert tensions between nuclear-armed countries.