Florida told young men the COVID vaccine was dangerous, but failed to tell them the full story | Opinion

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Back in October, when Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo issued an ominous warning that young men shouldn’t get the COVID vaccine because it might cause heart problems, he seemed to be acting more as a politician than a doctor.

His advice ran counter to recommendations of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The analysis he cited was not peer-reviewed, had no named authors and was missing key details in the methodology section.

Top epidemiologists and doctors blasted his conclusions, with the director of the Institute for Vaccine Safety at Johns Hopkins University, Daniel Salmon, telling Politico that it looked like “politics driving science. And the result is you get terrible science.”

Now more information has come to light. And it makes Ladapo and the state health department look even more irresponsible — and more political. According to draft versions of the state-produced analysis obtained by the Tampa Bay Times through Florida’s public records law, Florida had data showing that contracting COVID-19 was actually much riskier than the vaccine — about five times riskier when it came to cardiac-related deaths.

Yet, by the time the analysis made it online for Floridians to see — it was posted by the Florida Department of Health — that critically important bit of data was missing. And it was never mentioned by Ladapo.

Sketchy medical advice

Ladapo, remember, also promoted Ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine as legitimate treatments for COVID — they are not — and said last year that the state is against COVID vaccines for children. (The vaccines are considered safe and effective for children.)

Three epidemiologists who reviewed the drafts told the Tampa Bay Times that leaving the information out means the recommendation is so flawed it should be rescinded. Not massaged. Not tweaked. Rescinded.

One — Matt Hitchings, an infectious-disease epidemiologist and professor of biostatistics at the University of Florida — called it “a grave violation of research integrity.”

And yet how many young men and their parents relied on Ladapo’s guidance and made decisions that could have created far more risk for individuals than the shot?

Ladapo told the Times that his decisions are “led by the raw science — not fear.” But what about the other “raw science,” the part that said getting COVID was a lot riskier than getting the shot?

The Florida Department of Health responded to our request for more information about the data that was excluded by pointing to a Twitter thread by Ladapo. It discussed “bias in disease reporting” and said that most mild cases don’t appear in databases. In it, he said that “COVID has corrupted scientists’ ability to think clearly about epidemiology” and added that it’s “sad that people rush to defend a vaccine that has shown increased cardiovascular risk in multiple studies.”

But that still leaves us wondering: Why not simply post all the data?

The risk is mild

As we’ve said before, it is true that COVID vaccines can cause heart inflammation in young men and boys, but that’s a rare occurrence, and symptoms are typically temporary and mild. The protective effect of the vaccine is widely considered to outweigh the risks. Hundreds of millions of people have gotten the vaccines in this country alone.

We’ll never know for sure how much damage Ladapo and the state health department have done by taking this position. They hold sway over some folks — though asking your own doctor is generally the best idea when it comes to medical advice.

But we do know this: By removing critical information from the COVID risk analysis, Florida is continuing to create mistrust in the health system. That’s doing a disservice to us all — not least, Ladapo himself.