Story Highlight
– Former adviser calls for apology over Covid vaccine mandates.
– Claims informed consent was abandoned during the pandemic.
– Trust in health institutions declined post-mandate enforcement.
– Advocates for transparency, independent evaluation, and accountability.
– Concerns raised over vaccine safety, particularly in youth.
Full Story
A prominent cardiologist and former adviser to the Make America Healthy Again initiative has called for accountability regarding the Covid-19 vaccine mandates, asserting that the public deserves an apology. In a recent commentary featured in the journal Science, Public Health Policy and the Law, Dr Aseem Malhotra and his co-author, psychologist Dr Andrea Nazarenko, contended that the principle of informed consent was severely compromised during the pandemic, which they argue has led to a significant erosion of trust in public health institutions.
The pair highlighted the detrimental impact of enforcing vaccine mandates while minimising the potential adverse effects associated with the new vaccinations. They claim this approach effectively silenced many who questioned the narrative and resulted in a broader damage to public confidence in healthcare systems. “Until the most urgent questions are answered,” they wrote, “nothing less than a global moratorium on Covid mRNA vaccines, coupled with formal, unequivocal apologies from governments and medical bodies for mandates and for silencing truth seekers, will suffice.”
In the United States, several federal mandates requiring Covid vaccinations were implemented, remaining in effect until May 2023. State-level actions varied significantly, with some Democrat-led states, such as California, Oregon, and New York, pursuing stringent measures that included termination of employment for those who opted not to comply with vaccination requirements. The enforcement of mask mandates and lockdowns across the country further contributed to an atmosphere of distrust—recent surveys have indicated a notable decline in public confidence towards the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Trust fell from 73 percent in December 2020 to just 61 percent by the present.
The implications of vaccine-related injuries have also been topics of concern, with approximately 14,800 claims submitted in the U.S. as of now. However, only a small fraction of these, precisely 122, have resulted in compensation. Despite over 270 million Americans receiving at least one dose of the vaccine, leading to an estimated prevention of more than 3.2 million deaths and 18.5 million hospitalizations, there remains apprehension regarding severe side effects. The authors assert that serious adverse reactions are still considered rare.
In a pre-publication interview with the Daily Mail, Dr Malhotra described the Covid vaccination mandates for young adults as “criminal,” arguing that many in this demographic experienced negligible benefits while facing potential serious harms. After his involvement with the health initiative in the U.S., he has now aligned himself with a group aiming to establish a similar movement, dubbed Make Europe Healthy Again (MEHA), to share these sentiments on a broader scale.
Dr Malhotra and Dr Nazarenko’s paper, titled “Mandates and Lack of Transparency on COVID-19 Vaccine Safety has Fuelled Distrust – An Apology to Patients is Long Overdue,” elaborated on the dangers they allege are linked to Covid vaccinations and advocated for an extensive inquiry into these matters. They stated that “the most egregious failure to learn from emerging evidence concerned vaccine safety signals,” adding that while the original trials had indicated the vaccines were safe, a swift emergence of concerning safety signals indicated otherwise within six months of their rollout. Despite this evidence, existing policies and recommendations largely continued unchanged.
The commentary also touched on the differential risk presented by the virus, noting that older adults and individuals with pre-existing health conditions were significantly more susceptible to severe outcomes, compared to younger people and children who generally faced a lower risk. As concerns emerged regarding the association between Covid vaccinations and myocarditis—an inflammatory condition of the heart often manageable yet potentially severe in rare cases in younger individuals—the debate surrounding the necessity of vaccinating this demographic intensified.
Dr Malhotra and Dr Nazarenko acknowledged the initial uncertainties that guided decision-making during the pandemic’s onset. They stated, “It is understandable that, in the early days of the pandemic, decisions were made under uncertainty, guided by the best evidence available at the time. However, such justification cannot extend indefinitely.” They emphasised the ethical responsibility to reassess policies as new evidence arose that challenged earlier assumptions about vaccine benefits versus risks.
The conversation around these issues has also drawn commentary from experts in the field. Dr Mattias Desmet, a clinical psychologist at the University of Ghent in Belgium, who was not involved in the study, characterised the authors’ statements as a reflection of the “true tragedy” that has arisen over the course of the pandemic, citing a loss of faith in a scientific process he argues has deviated from its core values of truth and integrity.































Any public health intervention must be underpinned by clear communication, genuine informed consent and transparent evaluation of risks and benefits. If people feel decisions were imposed without adequate explanation or independent oversight that undermines trust, which is essential for effective health programmes. An open, evidence based review of policy decisions and outcomes would help restore confidence and ensure lessons are learned for future emergencies.
Wow! it’s about time. there are people who should be in jail because of the trauma they caused to a whole generation