The decision was made after Trump signed an order indicating the United States would pull out of the global health agency.
Officials in the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) were ordered to stop working with the World Health Organization (WHO), effective immediately, according to a memorandum that was sent out this week.
John Nkengasong, a CDC official, issued a memo on Sunday to senior agency leaders that staff working with WHO must immediately stop their collaborations and “await further guidance.”
The stop-work memo issued by Nkengasong applied to “all CDC staff engaging with WHO through technical working groups, coordinating centers, advisory boards, cooperative agreements or other means—in person or virtual,” while staff are not allowed to visit WHO offices.
Some exceptions, Fink said, would be made for communications that impact “critical health, safety, environmental, financial or nation security functions.” Those statements would have to be reviewed beforehand, she added.
The order targeting the CDC isn’t the only Trump action involving the federal health agency. He also froze spending on an anti-HIV program, which was started by President George W. Bush decades ago. That was suspended as part of a broader freeze on foreign aid for at least 90 days.
Under Trump’s order signaling the United States will leave the WHO, it sets a 12-month notice period to leave the health body and stop all financial contributions to its work. The order to withdraw from WHO did not take immediate effect as it requires the approval of Congress and that the United States will have to meet its financial obligations to WHO for the current fiscal year.
Trump selected Fink, an endocrinologist and career civil servant who had led the HHS Office on Women’s Health, to serve as interim HHS secretary while Senate confirmation gets underway for nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the agency. Kennedy is facing his first hearing before a Senate panel this week.
Trump has also selected former Florida Republican congressman Dave Weldon, a medical doctor, to head the CDC and named Johns Hopkins surgeon Marty Makary to lead the FDA. Those positions require Senate confirmation, too.
The president last week confirmed that he removed Secret Service protection for Dr. Anthony Fauci, the former longtime head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases who had served as a presidential advisor during the COVID-19 pandemic.
When asked about the decision on Jan. 24 in North Carolina, Trump told reporters, “You can’t have a security detail for the rest of your life because you worked for government.”
The Epoch Times contacted WHO and the CDC for comment Monday.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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