BATON ROUGE, La. The ambitious liver doctor would go just about anywhere in his home state to give people the hepatitis B vaccine.
Bill Cassidy offered jabs to thousands of inmates at Louisianas maximum-security prison in the early 2000s. A decade before that, he set up vaccine clinics in middle schools, a model as a success.
He got that whole generation immunized in East Baton Rouge, said Holley Galland, a retired doctor who worked with Cassidy vaccinating schoolchildren.
About the same time, a lawyer and environmental activist with a famous last name was starting to build the loyal anti-vaccine coalition that, two decades later, would move President Donald Trump to nominate him as the nations top health official.泭
Today, a year after now-Sen. Cassidy warily cast the vote that ensured Robert F. Kennedy Jr.s ascension to that role, the Louisiana Republicans life's work in medicine and in politics is unraveling.泭
Newborn hepatitis B vaccination rates in the U.S. had plunged to 73% as of August, down 10 percentage points since a February 2023 high, published in JAMA last month. In December, the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices remade by Kennedy voted to revoke a two-decade-old recommendation that all newborns get the shot.
The next month, Trump endorsed U.S. Rep. Julia Letlow, a Cassidy challenger in whats shaping up to be a competitive Republican Senate primary. Letlows foray into politics began in 2021 when she took the seat won by her husband, left vacant after he died from covid.
窪蹋勛圖厙 News made multiple requests for comment from Cassidy over three months. His staff declined to make him available for an interview or provide comment. Letlows campaign did not respond to requests for comment.
Rise of the Skeptics
As the May primary nears, some Louisiana doctors are worried theyve begun a long trek down a dark road when it comes to vaccine-preventable diseases.
Last year, on the day Kennedy was sworn in a thousand miles away in Washington, Louisianas health department stopped promoting vaccines, halting its clinics and advertising. Its communications about an ongoing whooping cough outbreak in the state have nearly ceased. It took months for the state to announce last year that two infants had died from the illness. A Louisiana childs death from the flu was confirmed this January, and a couple of cases of measles were reported last year.
Spokespeople for the Louisiana Department of Health did not respond to questions.
Its so hard to see children get sick from illnesses that they should have never gotten in the first place, said Mikki Bouquet, a pediatrician in Baton Rouge. You want to just scream into the void of this community over how they failed this child.

As anti-vaccine forces have taken hold of the state and federal health departments, Cassidy has lamented the consequences.
Families are getting sick and people are dying from vaccine-preventable deaths, and that tragedy needs to stop, he last fall.
But while it is Cassidys duty as chairman of the Senates Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee to conduct oversight of the health department, Kennedy has appeared before the committee just once since he was confirmed.
The secretary speaks at a regular clip with Cassidy, said Department of Health and Human Services spokesperson Andrew Nixon.
Kennedys department has elevated Louisiana vaccine skeptics. The state surgeon general who terminated Louisianas vaccine campaign, Ralph Abraham, was named deputy director of the CDC. (He left the role in February.) And Kennedy handpicked Evelyn Griffin, a Baton Rouge OB-GYN who later replaced Abraham as the state surgeon general, for an appointment to ACIP. Griffin the covid vaccine had dangerous side effects for young patients.
Research has shown that serious side effects from the vaccinations are rare and that the shots saved millions of lives during the pandemic.
Cassidy has really not had an outspoken chorus of policy supporters when it comes to inoculating people, said Michael Henderson, a professor of political communication at Louisiana State University. Theres not a lot of political stakes in doing that in Louisiana if youre a Republican.
Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry reprimanded Cassidy after the senator called for the states health department to ease access to covid shots.
Why dont you just leave a prescription for the dangerous Covid shot at your district office and anyone can swing by and get one! the Republican in September.
On Eggshells in the Exam Room
On a sunny February afternoon, as Carnival floats were readied to parade the streets of New Orleans, pediatrician Katie Brown approached a basement apartment on a well-child visit. Cowboy boot pendants dangled from her ears, and a pack of diapers were clutched tightly in her arms.
The patient, a toddler who waved at the sight of visitors, was up to date on her immunizations. But when Brown suggested a covid vaccine, the girls mother quickly declined, noting she had never gotten the shot either.
Many of Browns young patients seen through Nest Health, which offers in-home visits covered by Louisianas Medicaid program are current with their vaccines. Brown said home visits make parents more comfortable immunizing their children, but shes still spending more time these days explaining what theyre getting in those shots.
After covid vaccines, thats when some people just decided, I dont know if I trust vaccines, period, she said.
Across the state, vaccination rates have declined since the pandemic, falling short of the levels scientists say are required to achieve herd immunity for some deadly diseases, including measles. About have had the recommended two doses of the measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine.
The New Orleans Health Department has tried to step up with a $100,000 immunization campaign of its own, with clinics and billboards, during this years flu season, said Jennifer Avegno, the departments director.
But the states absence is felt. Other parishes across Louisiana have not taken similar action, leaving doctors largely on their own to promote immunizations.
Ill say that with certainty, Avegno said. Its been a blow to not have a statewide coordination.
A day after Browns home visit, a mother in Baton Rouge shook her head when Bouquet offered a flu shot for her 10-year-old daughter in an exam room.
In the waiting room, parents could thumb through a handmade book that offers scientific facts to counter fears about vaccines. A laminated guide placed in each exam room explained the benefits of each recommended immunization.
Bouquet said shes experimenting with ways to educate parents about vaccines without seeming overbearing. She still hasnt figured out a surefire formula. Some parents now shut down any vaccine talk, and she worries others skip scheduling appointments to avoid the topic entirely.
Were having to walk on eggshells a bit to determine how to get that trust back, Bouquet said. And maybe these discussions can come up in future visits.

Pro-Vax, Pro-Anti-Vaxxer
Childrens Health Defense, the nonprofit that Kennedy helmed, worked to erode vaccine trust during the pandemic falsely claiming, for instance, that covid shots cause organ damage and that polio vaccines were at fault for a rise in the disease. The organization also sued the federal government over the mRNA-based covid shots, hoping to get their emergency authorizations from the Food and Drug Administration revoked.
When Kennedy came before Cassidys committee in January 2025 as Trumps nominee for health secretary, the senator-doctor saw risks if the prominent anti-vaccine lawyer was confirmed.
Cassidy described a time years ago when he loaded an 18-year-old onto a helicopter to get an emergency liver transplant. The young woman had acute hepatitis B, an incurable disease that is spread primarily through blood or bodily fluids and can lead to liver failure.
It was the worst day of my medical career, he said, addressing Kennedy at the witness table in front of him. Because I thought, $50 of vaccines could have prevented this all.
Cassidy started in politics in 2006 as a state senator, winning election to the U.S. House two years later. When he first ran for the U.S. Senate, in 2014, he charmed Louisiana voters with campaign ads showing him , talking about his work with Hurricane Katrina evacuees and patients at Baton Rouges public hospital.
But some Republicans soured on Cassidy after he voted to convict Trump on an article of impeachment charging him with inciting the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.
The impeachment vote has hampered Cassidys reelection bid this year in a state where Trump captured 60% of the vote in 2024.
Cassidy has things that are associated with his name: the impeachment vote in 2021, Henderson said.
Cassidys loyalty to Trump was tested again with Kennedys nomination. Cassidy said he endorsed Kennedy after extracting pledges that he wouldnt tinker with the nations vaccination program.
But since taking office, Kennedy has largely ignored those promises, and Cassidy hasnt publicly rebuked him.
Former Texas congressman Michael Burgess served for years with Cassidy in the House, where they were founding members of the GOP Doctors Caucus, started in 2009. He said Cassidys discomfort with some of Kennedys actions is palpable.
You could hear some of the pain in Sen. Cassidys voice when he was addressing that the secretary wanted to drop the birth dose of hepatitis B, Burgess said. You got cases to nearly zero on hepatitis B. It was painful to him to think about taking this away from the population.
Retired Baton Rouge nurse practitioner Elizabeth Britton has switched her party affiliation so she can vote in the closed Republican primary for Cassidy, with whom she vaccinated inmates decades ago.
She doesnt quite understand the mess in Washington that resulted in the senator voting to confirm a vaccine critic.
Watching Kennedy and others promulgate doubts about shots she once administered has made her profoundly sad and angry, she said, but most of all worried.
It puts a pit in my stomach, because I know the consequences of people not getting the vaccine, she said.
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