
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., speaks before Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump at a campaign event Nov. 1, 2024, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo)
A major legal battle has erupted over the U.S. government's sudden move to stop recommending COVID-19 vaccines for most children and pregnant women.
On Monday, a coalition of top public health groups and doctors filed a federal lawsuit in Boston. They argue that Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s decision to drop the guidance endangers public health and violates federal procedures.
From Medical Consensus to Confusion
For years, U.S. health agencies urged all Americans aged six months and older to get annual COVID-19 shots. But that changed in late May. Kennedy, long known for his anti-vaccine views, abruptly removed the recommendation for healthy kids and pregnant women from the CDC’s vaccine guidance.
Doctors say the fallout has been immediate. Many patients are now questioning vaccines across the board. Others are struggling to access shots they once expected to receive without issue.
“This Is Causing Chaos in Clinics”
Dr. Susan Kressly, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, says the move has added stress to every pediatric visit. “There’s uncertainty and anxiety now with every vaccine conversation,” she said. This comes as pediatric flu deaths have reached a 15-year high, and the U.S. faces its worst measles outbreak in over 30 years.
The lawsuit accuses Kennedy and his team at the Department of Health and Human Services of bypassing expert review and misleading the public. Plaintiffs include the American Public Health Association, the Infectious Diseases Society of America, and the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine, among others.
Panel Dismissals Raise Alarm
The suit also takes aim at Kennedy’s shakeup of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. Earlier this month, he dismissed the entire 17-member panel and replaced it with individuals—some with anti-vaccine views.
The plaintiffs argue that this change further undermines decades of evidence-based policymaking. The committee has long served as a key check in how vaccine policies are shaped and updated.
A Personal Stake in the Fight
The case also includes a pregnant doctor working in Massachusetts, listed as “Jane Doe.” She wants to receive a COVID-19 booster to protect her unborn child but says the updated policy has made it harder to access the shot.
Initially, her legal team stated she was denied the vaccine at pharmacies. That was later clarified—she had not yet attempted to get the shot but fears difficulty due to policy confusion.
Why Boston? A Historic Setting
The lawsuit was filed in Boston for a reason. Lead attorney Richard H. Hughes IV pointed to the state’s deep ties to public health history. From early inoculation efforts during the 1721 smallpox outbreak to a landmark 1905 vaccine ruling, Massachusetts has long played a pivotal role.
Kennedy has defended his move, saying he “stands by his CDC reforms,” according to an HHS spokesperson.
As the legal fight unfolds, doctors warn the damage is already being felt—in clinics, in conversations, and in the trust between physicians and the public.

