A growing number of doctors say that they won’t get COVID-19 vaccine boosters, citing a lack of clinical trial evidence.
“I have taken my last COVID vaccine without RCT level evidence it will reduce my risk of severe disease,” Dr. Todd Lee, an infectious disease expert at McGill University, wrote on Twitter.
Lee, who has received three vaccine doses, noted that he was infected with the Omicron coronavirus variant—the vaccines provide little protection against infection—and described himself as a healthy male in his 40s.
Dr. Vinay Prasad, a professor of epidemiology and biostatics at the University of California–San Francisco, also said he wouldn’t take any additional vaccine boosters until clinical trial data become available.
“I took at least 1 dose against my will. It was unethical and scientifically bankrupt,” he said.
“Pay close attention to note this isn’t anti-vaccine sentiment. This is ‘provide [hard] evidence of benefit to justify ongoing use’ which is very different. It is only fair for a 30 billion dollar a year product given to hundreds of millions,” Lee wrote on Twitter.
Dr. Mark Silverberg, who founded the Toronto Immune and Digestive Health Institute; Kevin Bass, a medical student; and Dr. Tracy Hoeg, an epidemiologist at the University of California–San Francisco, joined Lee and Prasad in stating their opposition to more boosters, at least for now.
Hoeg said she didn’t need clinical trials to know that she isn’t getting any boosters after receiving a two-dose primary series, noting that she took the second dose “against my will.”
“I also had an adverse reaction to dose 1 moderna and, if I could do it again, I would not have had any covid vaccines,” she wrote on Twitter. “I was glad my parents in their 70s could get covid vaccinated but have yet to see non-confounded data to advise them about the bivalent booster. I would have liked to see an RCT for the bivalent for people their age and for adults with health conditions that put them at risk.”
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted emergency use authorization to updated vaccine boosters, or bivalent shots, from Pfizer and Moderna in August 2022, despite there being no human data.
Professor Calls for Halt to Messenger RNA Vaccines
A professor became the latest to call for a halt to the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which are both based on messenger RNA technology.Levi was referring to post-vaccination heart inflammation, or myocarditis. The condition is one of the few that authorities have acknowledged is caused by the messenger RNA vaccines.
Pfizer and Moderna officials haven’t responded to requests for comment.
Other experts, including Dr. Joseph Fraiman and Dr. Peter McCullough, have previously called for a halt to the administration of the vaccines.
“We need to figure out ... if their benefits outweigh harm or if harm outweighs benefits,” he said. “The only thing that can answer that question is going to be a randomized trial.”