FDA social media posts on COVID under legal, medical scrutiny for misleading claims

The FDA's Twitter habits are getting scrutiny in court and from medical professionals as the feds seesaw between walking back their once-confident COVID-19 assertions and making sweeping new claims without providing evidence.

Having long ago conceded that COVID vaccines can't stop viral transmission and that assertions to the contrary by President Biden among others were based on "hope" rather than science, the feds are now downplaying the influence of their social media to escape liability for allegedly violating statutory limits by interfering in medical judgments.

At the same time, over the past two months, FDA Commissioner Robert Califf has gone on a spree of evidence-free tweets about bivalent boosters and oral antivirals, such as Pfizer's rebound infection-prone Paxlovid, prompting exasperation from leading doctors.

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