Houston Chronicle Sunday

Officials in Fla. cut key data from study on COVID

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TAMPA, Fla. — An analysis that was the basis of a highly criticized recommenda­tion from Florida’s surgeon general cautioning young men against getting the COVID-19 vaccine omitted informatio­n that showed catching the virus could increase the risk of a cardiac-related death much more than getting the mRNA shot, according to drafts of the analysis obtained by the Tampa Bay Times.

The nonbinding recommenda­tion made by Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo last fall ran counter to the advice provided by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Ladapo, a Harvard-trained medical doctor who was appointed by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2021 to head the Florida Department of Health, has drawn intense scrutiny over his shared resistance with the Republican governor to COVID-19 mandates for vaccines and masks and other health policies endorsed by the federal government.

The early drafts of the analysis obtained by the Times through a records request showed that catching COVID-19 could increase the chances of a cardiac-related death much more than getting the vaccine, but that informatio­n was missing from the final version put out by the Florida Department of Health last October.

Ladapo said that the risk of men ages 18 to 39 having cardiac complicati­ons outweighed the benefits of getting the mRNA vaccine.

Matt Hitchings, an infectious disease epidemiolo­gist and professor of biostatist­ics at the University of Florida, told the Times that it seems that sections of the analysis were omitted because they did not fit the narrative the surgeon general wanted to push.

“This is a grave violation of research integrity,” Hitchings said. “(The vaccine) has done a lot to advance the health of people of Florida and he’s encouragin­g people to mistrust it.”

In a statement on Twitter posted Saturday in response to the Times’ story, Ladapo said, “It’s not only unfortunat­e that COVID has corrupted scientists’ ability to think clearly about epidemiolo­gy but also sad that people rush to defend a vaccine that has shown increased cardiovasc­ular risk in multiple studies.”

Last year, Ladapo released guidance recommendi­ng against vaccinatio­ns for healthy children, contradict­ing federal public health leaders whose advice says all kids should get the shots. In response, the American Academy of Pediatrics and its Florida chapter issued written statements reiteratin­g support for vaccinatin­g eligible children age 5 and older against COVID-19.

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