
Vaccine injury compensation program should be created to build trust: Report
By Ray Bogan (Political Correspondent)
The House Committee on the Coronavirus released its final 557-page report with key recommendations for how to handle the next pandemic. Overall, lawmakers said individual states need to better prepare and the U.S. needs to be less reliant on foreign supplies.
Media Landscape
See how news outlets across the political spectrum are covering this story. Learn moreBias Distribution
Left
Untracked Bias
Here are the details of the recommendations:
The U.S. must reduce its reliance on other countries for pharmaceuticals and medical supplies.
- Many of the medications Americans take are manufactured overseas, while the active ingredients and chemical compounds used to make them are overwhelmingly made in China.
- The committee said in addition to reducing dependence on foreign nations, drug manufacturers must be more upfront with the Food and Drug Administration when they have supply issues.

Download the SAN app today to stay up-to-date with Unbiased. Straight Facts™.
Point phone camera here
States must maintain their own stockpile of emergency medical supplies.
- The strategic national stockpile was designed as a “short-term, stopgap buffer” –– it was never meant to handle a national emergency.
- States are not currently required to maintain their own stockpile, but the committee said they should because they’d have guaranteed access and faster deployment.
A robust and transparent vaccine injury compensation program is necessary for promoting trust in vaccines.
- The committee said the federal government must foster trust in vaccines. To do that they should create an adjudication and compensation program for injuries vaccines may cause.
The report also touched on the shortcomings of the pandemic response. It said long-term school closures and six-foot social distancing weren’t supported by science, and lockdowns led to more than 160,000 businesses closing, 60% of which were permanent.
The House Committee on the Coronavirus released its final 557 page report with key recommendations for how to handle the next pandemic. Overall, lawmakers say individual states need to better prepare, and the US needs to be less reliant on foreign supplies.
Here are the details:
- The US must reduce its reliance on other countries for pharmaceuticals and medical supplies.
- Many of the medications Americans take are manufactured overseas, while the active ingredients and chemical compounds used to make them are overwhelmingly made in China.
- The committee said in addition to reducing dependence on foreign nations, drug manufacturers must be more upfront with the FDA when they have supply issues.
2. States must maintain their own stockpile of emergency medical supplies.
- The strategic national stockpile was designed as a “short-term, stopgap buffer”; it was never meant to handle a national emergency.
- States are not currently required to maintain their own stockpile, but the committee said they should because they’d have guaranteed access and faster deployment.
3. A robust and transparent vaccine injury compensation program is necessary for promoting trust in vaccines.
- The committee said the federal government must foster trust in vaccines. To do that they should create an adjudication and compensation program for injuries vaccines may cause.
The report also touched on the shortcomings of the pandemic response. It said long term school closures and six foot social distancing weren’t supported by science, and lockdowns led to more than 160,000 businesses closing, 60% of which were permanent.
Media Landscape
See how news outlets across the political spectrum are covering this story. Learn moreBias Distribution
Left
Untracked Bias
Straight to your inbox.
By entering your email, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and acknowledge the Privacy Policy.
MOST POPULAR
-
Getty Images
Starbucks ordered to pay $50 million to driver burned by hot coffee
Watch 1:31Mar 17 -
Getty Images
Trump envoy to meet Putin in Moscow over potential ceasefire in Ukraine
Watch 1:35Mar 11 -
Getty Images
Coinbase says SEC is dropping its lawsuit, ‘righting a major wrong’ for crypto
Watch 3:41Feb 21