Another Friday night massacre, but this time it’s not just an essential federal public health agency that will die.
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![SECONDARY IMAGE #1 (The RIFs Have Begun)It’s never a good night when the texts start rolling in from my government colleagues. Last Friday night, October 10, was the worst one yet. Reductions in force (RIF) notices began pouring into inboxes across the US federal government, disproportionately at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Entire centers had their leadership teams gutted, along with all their staff. This is the comprehensive dismantling of America’s national public health agency. One of my friends texted me that night: They are eviscerating us. It’s surreal. These RIFs spanned the US government and were the work of Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought. President Donald Trump and the Republicans forced a government shutdown as a further means of centralizing power within the executive branch and cementing Trump’s authoritarian rule. Trump is shamelessly spreading propaganda like this “Government Shutdown Clock” on .gov websites, blaming the Democrats for the shutdown he and his party engineered. The Democrats haven’t capitulated yet, but they aren’t really doing much else of note. So Vought has used the ongoing government shutdown as a pretext to continue his premeditated murder spree of the federal workforce. More than 4,000 public servants lost their jobs across the government last Friday night. More than 1,100 people of those were from the Department of Health and Human Services and, from what my colleagues in multiple HHS agencies tell me, that was overwhelmingly concentrated at the CDC. To be very clear, these RIFs are illegal. There is nothing in the US Constitution that gives the president the power to begin culling civil servants because the government is shut down. The entire point of the division of power in American democracy is that the president doesn’t have unlimited power over the whole of government, nor is he authorized to just fire entire organizational units of federal employees for political reasons. Trump and Vought are, as usual, trying to see what they can get away with. However, if they get away with these lawless RIFs at the CDC, the consequences will include a death toll. The people who got RIF notices work on some of our most critical public health functions. Without them, the CDC will not be able to provide these services. And without these services, Americans — and people around the world — will die. In Loving Memory of the CDC The CDC had already been brutalized by the Trump administration. Besides inflicting massive cuts in the Valentine’s Day and April Fool’s massacres, Trump and HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. have defunded critical programs, scaled back essential surveillance, dissolved expert committees, overridden standard evidence-based practices, descheduled critical childhood vaccines, ignored the domestic terror attack on the CDC building in August, purged the CDC of its leadership, and installed incompetent, unqualified, ideologically extreme political appointees like Acting CDC Director Jim O’Neill. All this has severely impaired the CDC’s normal function. One colleague described their current job as finding “bureaucratic cheat codes” to carry out their most basic duties, which is all they can accomplish because the CDC was already so thoroughly shucked of staff and experience. Last week’s purge will likely deal a death blow to most critical functions of an agency that was already on life support. This will also deal a literal death blow to many, many people outside the agency, given what the CDC employees who were let go actually did at work. The CDC was not the world’s model for national public health agencies just because it marketed itself well; it’s because the CDC actually did things to benefit public health and developed a lot of expertise in doing those things. Now there is nobody there to carry out that work. It’s worth exploring what the CDC will no longer be able to do. The National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Disease (NCIRD) is the part of the CDC that runs national vaccination programs and responds to respiratory diseases. The entire Office of the Director (OD), including the acting director, and all centers within the OD received RIF notices. The Office of Data Surveillance and Informatics in the Immunization Services Division was eliminated, so there goes our ability to track and access data on vaccination and vaccine-preventable diseases. So were employees in the NCIRD policy office, so bid farewell to the ability to make evidence-based public health policy recommendations for pandemics and immunization. And don’t expect any medical guidance either, since the chief medical officer’s office was eliminated. This may not be surprising, given the reasons former Chief Medical Officer Debra Houry resigned on principle at the end of August. Epidemic and pandemic preparedness and response are now crippled. The Public Health Infrastructure Center (PHIC) lost its OD too, as well as its Division of Partnership Support, which supports coordination between CDC and state and local officials in outbreak response. RIFs at the Division of Workforce Development included the entire 2023 and 2024 classes of civilian Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS) officers; all fired. EIS officers are the epidemiologists who respond to outbreaks and contain them. But civilians weren’t the only ones impacted: RIF notices also went to the Commissioned Corps Liaison Office that coordinates Public Health Service officers on duty at CDC. The Global Health Center (GHC), which extends CDC’s capabilities globally to build response capacity, also lost its entire OD. At the National Center for Emerging, Zoonotic, and Infectious Diseases (NCEZID), both the Enteric Diseases Laboratory Branch and the Poxvirus and Rabies Branch were RIFed. The CDC now has no capacity whatsoever to respond to emerging infectious threats, including outbreaks of respiratory diseases like COVID and flu, foodborne illnesses, and less common but still severe outbreaks of mpox and rabies. There is no infrastructure to support responders, experts to investigate and contain outbreaks, or ability to coordinate with state and local health officials on the ground, at home, or abroad. CDC experts actively responding to an Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo that has killed 43 people were RIFed in the middle of their deployment. It is not just outbreak response being decimated. The entire OD working on Chronic Diseases was eliminated, despite chronic illness being a stated priority of Kennedy’s MAHA agenda. The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey staff at the Office of Public Health Data, Surveillance, and Technology received RIF notices, as did people in policy and communications at the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIPC)’s Office of Program Management and Operations. Employees working on behavioral intelligence, devoted to helping understand how behavior affects chronic disease, injury, nutrition, and illness through rigorous data collection, also were given notice. The CDC will no longer be able to inform the public about health threats facing the nation, either. The Center for Forecasting and Analytics (CFA) staff dedicated to the ”Inform” pillar of their mandate is gone. CFA tracks, models, and predicts epidemic trajectory and severity, so they no longer can share their critical findings with the public. Over in the Office of Science, the entire staff of the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) has been fired, as have many in the Office of Science Dissemination that oversees MMWR. This prevents the CDC from sharing critical information about health with the public in a deeply trusted, reliable report that has been published weekly for more than 60 years. The CDC Library and CDC Museum also were RIFed, denying federal employees and the public from accessing essential, taxpayer-supported historical, scientific, and educational resources. The CDC will no longer be able to inform national policy, either, as the entire Washington, DC, office, charged with coordinating CDC activity with DC policymakers, has been terminated. Beyond that, the CDC will not be able to function administratively, as the Office of Safety, Security, and Asset Management (OSSAM), which safeguards employee, facility, and data security at CDC, lost its entire Occupational Health and Safety office. Barely two months after a gunman shot more than 500 rounds at the CDC headquarters and killed a police officer, the office devoted to employee safety has been RIFed. The Workplace Health Office was also RIFed, as was the Office of Strategic Business Initiatives, which is charged with training and supporting risk management across the entire agency. Not only have hundreds of CDC employees been terminated, but the ones who remain will be forced to function within an organization that has eliminated mechanisms for looking after their well-being, safety, and ability to effectively do their jobs to carry out the CDC mission. These RIFs, if allowed to remain, will prevent the CDC from functioning at all. That has profound consequences for everyone’s health, in America and overseas. [Editor’s Note: On October 15, subsequent to this column’s initial publication and as a result of litigation in which many of its points were advanced, a federal judge in San Francisco temporarily blocked the latest round of government layoffs that targeted employees at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Litigation in this and related cases is ongoing.] What’s the Worst That Could Happen? This is a terrible time for America to lose its public health capacity. Declining vaccination rates put us at risk of larger and larger preventable disease outbreaks. America will lose measles elimination status. More diseases will be imported. Outbreaks will go unrecognized and unchecked. These epidemics will strain health care systems, probably in some cases to the point of breaking them. Because there is no surveillance capacity, we will not be able to track these epidemics accurately or collect data on them. Apart from epidemics, our national health systems will be further strained as the impacts of untracked, untreated chronic diseases make more Americans sicker and sicker. But there is another monster looming just out of frame. Currently, highly pathogenic H5N1 avian flu is causing massive outbreaks nationwide, with 41 confirmed infected flocks of more than 6.3 million birds. The majority of these outbreaks are occurring in commercial poultry operations. This is a minefield and it’s just a matter of time before someone takes one wrong step and the entire thing blows up. SECONDARY IMAGE #2 (Bird Flu Outbreak Chart) Right now, H5N1 is not capable of transmitting from human to human. However, with enough opportunity to infect humans and adapt to them, it could acquire that ability. As we enter flu season, the risk goes up considerably because H5N1 could reassort with a seasonal flu virus in a co-infected person. This would allow it to make a rapid evolutionary leap and acquire human-to-human transmissibility virtually overnight. To reduce that risk, we need to identify and prevent human infections. We need to monitor circulating viruses, especially in humans, to detect reassortants and track their spread. We need to have laboratory diagnostic testing and genomic sequencing, as well as accessible and transparent frameworks for gathering and sharing these critical data. We need to reduce seasonal flu circulation by increasing flu shot uptake as much as possible. We need to have EIS response teams ready to act if there is evidence of human-to-human transmission. The CDC is no longer able to conduct surveillance and response. The CDC no longer has the capacity to collect or analyze these data, or share it with state, local, or academic partners. The CDC no longer has adequately staffed response teams or offices devoted to immunization campaigns. The CDC has no leadership across multiple centers and offices that previously carried out this critical work. The CDC cannot respond to this threat, which has the potential to kill hundreds of millions of people. If H5N1 does make the jump in the US, we will likely not know about it until it is already a pandemic. Here is a nightmare scenario: H5N1 begins spreading; based on cases so far, this virus makes about 6 percent of infected people sick enough for hospitalization; it has about a 2 percent mortality rate based on known cases. SECONDARY IMAGE #3 (H5N1 Cases So Far Chart) If six patients show up at a clinic or a medical facility and they all have community-acquired H5N1, that means there are 94 other infected people who are not very sick but may be contagious. They feel well enough to travel, to socialize, to go to work, to play with their children, to carry on with their daily lives. They will infect other people. The virus can spread around the world before we even know it’s spreading because we can’t look for it. Those six patients will be the first of a pandemic that has already begun. It will be much, much worse than COVID-19. A 2 percent mortality rate may seem small, but at population scale that translates to a minimum of 7 million dead Americans, with more than 150 million deaths globally. That is just from the infection. Overwhelmed health care systems, food shortages, and economic, agricultural, and environmental devastation will cause far more. This is an existential threat to human civilization as we know it. I can’t say whether or not H5N1 will become a pandemic. I don’t know and nobody else does either. However, I do know that America and the world need the CDC more than ever. There Is Hope This is terribly dark and depressing, but there is hope. As I said before, these RIFs are completely illegal and unconstitutional. There is a reason they were issued on a Friday night. Vought and the Trump administration know they are completely unjustified. They don’t want people to know what they did and what the consequences will be, because they know that they are unlawful. They know their position is weak. Yes, fired employees need to sue and take this to the courts. However, there are still court cases percolating through the justice system regarding layoffs that happened months ago. The CDC’s function is too urgent to wait. Congress must step in now and reverse this as they continue to negotiate an end to the shutdown. This is not solely the Democrats’ responsibility, either. People dying preventable deaths is a bipartisan issue. As Americans, we must demand that our government not enact illegal policies that will kill us. Congress must act and restore functioning public health capacity to the nation now, before we all regret it. At least, before those of us who survive do. As a service to our readers, we curate noteworthy stories through partnerships with outside writers and thinkers. Dr. Angela Rasmussen is a virologist and co-editor in chief of Vaccine. This column has been adapted with the author’s permission from her Substack, Rasmussen Retorts.](https://whowhatwhy.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Russ_Vought_Rifs_Have_Begun_1111x247.jpg-900x210.png)
It’s never a good night when the texts start rolling in from my government colleagues. Last Friday night, October 10, was the worst one yet.
Reductions in force (RIF) notices began pouring into inboxes across the US federal government, disproportionately at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Entire centers had their leadership teams gutted, along with all their staff.
This is the comprehensive dismantling of America’s national public health agency. One of my friends texted me that night:
They are eviscerating us. It’s surreal.
These RIFs spanned the US government and were the work of Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought.
President Donald Trump and the Republicans forced a government shutdown as a further means of centralizing power within the executive branch and cementing Trump’s authoritarian rule. Trump is shamelessly spreading propaganda like this “Government Shutdown Clock” on .gov websites, blaming the Democrats for the shutdown he and his party engineered.
The Democrats haven’t capitulated yet, but they aren’t really doing much else of note. So Vought has used the ongoing government shutdown as a pretext to continue his premeditated murder spree of the federal workforce.
More than 4,000 public servants lost their jobs across the government last Friday night. More than 1,100 people of those were from the Department of Health and Human Services and, from what my colleagues in multiple HHS agencies tell me, that was overwhelmingly concentrated at the CDC.
To be very clear, these RIFs are illegal. There is nothing in the US Constitution that gives the president the power to begin culling civil servants because the government is shut down. The entire point of the division of power in American democracy is that the president doesn’t have unlimited power over the whole of government, nor is he authorized to just fire entire organizational units of federal employees for political reasons.
Trump and Vought are, as usual, trying to see what they can get away with.
However, if they get away with these lawless RIFs at the CDC, the consequences will include a death toll. The people who got RIF notices work on some of our most critical public health functions. Without them, the CDC will not be able to provide these services. And without these services, Americans — and people around the world — will die.
In Loving Memory of the CDC
The CDC had already been brutalized by the Trump administration. Besides inflicting massive cuts in the Valentine’s Day and April Fool’s massacres, Trump and HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. have defunded critical programs, scaled back essential surveillance, dissolved expert committees, overridden standard evidence-based practices, descheduled critical childhood vaccines, ignored the domestic terror attack on the CDC building in August, purged the CDC of its leadership, and installed incompetent, unqualified, ideologically extreme political appointees like Acting CDC Director Jim O’Neill.
All this has severely impaired the CDC’s normal function. One colleague described their current job as finding “bureaucratic cheat codes” to carry out their most basic duties, which is all they can accomplish because the CDC was already so thoroughly shucked of staff and experience.
Last week’s purge will likely deal a death blow to most critical functions of an agency that was already on life support.
This will also deal a literal death blow to many, many people outside the agency, given what the CDC employees who were let go actually did at work. The CDC was not the world’s model for national public health agencies just because it marketed itself well; it’s because the CDC actually did things to benefit public health and developed a lot of expertise in doing those things.
Now there is nobody there to carry out that work. It’s worth exploring what the CDC will no longer be able to do.
The National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Disease (NCIRD) is the part of the CDC that runs national vaccination programs and responds to respiratory diseases. The entire Office of the Director (OD), including the acting director, and all centers within the OD received RIF notices.
The Office of Data Surveillance and Informatics in the Immunization Services Division was eliminated, so there goes our ability to track and access data on vaccination and vaccine-preventable diseases. So were employees in the NCIRD policy office, so bid farewell to the ability to make evidence-based public health policy recommendations for pandemics and immunization. And don’t expect any medical guidance either, since the chief medical officer’s office was eliminated. This may not be surprising, given the reasons former Chief Medical Officer Debra Houry resigned on principle at the end of August.
Epidemic and pandemic preparedness and response are now crippled. The Public Health Infrastructure Center (PHIC) lost its OD too, as well as its Division of Partnership Support, which supports coordination between CDC and state and local officials in outbreak response.
RIFs at the Division of Workforce Development included the entire 2023 and 2024 classes of civilian Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS) officers; all fired. EIS officers are the epidemiologists who respond to outbreaks and contain them.
But civilians weren’t the only ones impacted: RIF notices also went to the Commissioned Corps Liaison Office that coordinates Public Health Service officers on duty at CDC. The Global Health Center (GHC), which extends CDC’s capabilities globally to build response capacity, also lost its entire OD. At the National Center for Emerging, Zoonotic, and Infectious Diseases (NCEZID), both the Enteric Diseases Laboratory Branch and the Poxvirus and Rabies Branch were RIFed.
The CDC now has no capacity whatsoever to respond to emerging infectious threats, including outbreaks of respiratory diseases like COVID and flu, foodborne illnesses, and less common but still severe outbreaks of mpox and rabies. There is no infrastructure to support responders, experts to investigate and contain outbreaks, or ability to coordinate with state and local health officials on the ground, at home, or abroad. CDC experts actively responding to an Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo that has killed 43 people were RIFed in the middle of their deployment.
It is not just outbreak response being decimated. The entire OD working on Chronic Diseases was eliminated, despite chronic illness being a stated priority of Kennedy’s MAHA agenda. The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey staff at the Office of Public Health Data, Surveillance, and Technology received RIF notices, as did people in policy and communications at the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIPC)’s Office of Program Management and Operations. Employees working on behavioral intelligence, devoted to helping understand how behavior affects chronic disease, injury, nutrition, and illness through rigorous data collection, also were given notice.
The CDC will no longer be able to inform the public about health threats facing the nation, either. The Center for Forecasting and Analytics (CFA) staff dedicated to the ”Inform” pillar of their mandate is gone. CFA tracks, models, and predicts epidemic trajectory and severity, so they no longer can share their critical findings with the public.
Over in the Office of Science, the entire staff of the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) has been fired, as have many in the Office of Science Dissemination that oversees MMWR. This prevents the CDC from sharing critical information about health with the public in a deeply trusted, reliable report that has been published weekly for more than 60 years.
The CDC Library and CDC Museum also were RIFed, denying federal employees and the public from accessing essential, taxpayer-supported historical, scientific, and educational resources.
The CDC will no longer be able to inform national policy, either, as the entire Washington, DC, office, charged with coordinating CDC activity with DC policymakers, has been terminated.
Beyond that, the CDC will not be able to function administratively, as the Office of Safety, Security, and Asset Management (OSSAM), which safeguards employee, facility, and data security at CDC, lost its entire Occupational Health and Safety office.
Barely two months after a gunman shot more than 500 rounds at the CDC headquarters and killed a police officer, the office devoted to employee safety has been RIFed. The Workplace Health Office was also RIFed, as was the Office of Strategic Business Initiatives, which is charged with training and supporting risk management across the entire agency.
Not only have hundreds of CDC employees been terminated, but the ones who remain will be forced to function within an organization that has eliminated mechanisms for looking after their well-being, safety, and ability to effectively do their jobs to carry out the CDC mission.
These RIFs, if allowed to remain, will prevent the CDC from functioning at all. That has profound consequences for everyone’s health, in America and overseas.
[Editor’s Note: On October 15, subsequent to this column’s initial publication and as a result of litigation in which many of its points were advanced, a federal judge in San Francisco temporarily blocked the latest round of government layoffs that targeted employees at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Litigation in this and related cases is ongoing.]
What’s the Worst That Could Happen?
This is a terrible time for America to lose its public health capacity. Declining vaccination rates put us at risk of larger and larger preventable disease outbreaks. America will lose measles elimination status. More diseases will be imported. Outbreaks will go unrecognized and unchecked.
These epidemics will strain health care systems, probably in some cases to the point of breaking them. Because there is no surveillance capacity, we will not be able to track these epidemics accurately or collect data on them. Apart from epidemics, our national health systems will be further strained as the impacts of untracked, untreated chronic diseases make more Americans sicker and sicker.
But there is another monster looming just out of frame. Currently, highly pathogenic H5N1 avian flu is causing massive outbreaks nationwide, with 41 confirmed infected flocks of more than 6.3 million birds. The majority of these outbreaks are occurring in commercial poultry operations. This is a minefield and it’s just a matter of time before someone takes one wrong step and the entire thing blows up.

Right now, H5N1 is not capable of transmitting from human to human. However, with enough opportunity to infect humans and adapt to them, it could acquire that ability.
As we enter flu season, the risk goes up considerably because H5N1 could reassort with a seasonal flu virus in a co-infected person. This would allow it to make a rapid evolutionary leap and acquire human-to-human transmissibility virtually overnight.
To reduce that risk, we need to identify and prevent human infections. We need to monitor circulating viruses, especially in humans, to detect reassortants and track their spread. We need to have laboratory diagnostic testing and genomic sequencing, as well as accessible and transparent frameworks for gathering and sharing these critical data. We need to reduce seasonal flu circulation by increasing flu shot uptake as much as possible. We need to have EIS response teams ready to act if there is evidence of human-to-human transmission.
The CDC is no longer able to conduct surveillance and response. The CDC no longer has the capacity to collect or analyze these data, or share it with state, local, or academic partners. The CDC no longer has adequately staffed response teams or offices devoted to immunization campaigns. The CDC has no leadership across multiple centers and offices that previously carried out this critical work.
The CDC cannot respond to this threat, which has the potential to kill hundreds of millions of people.
If H5N1 does make the jump in the US, we will likely not know about it until it is already a pandemic. Here is a nightmare scenario: H5N1 begins spreading; based on cases so far, this virus makes about 6 percent of infected people sick enough for hospitalization; it has about a 2 percent mortality rate based on known cases.

If six patients show up at a clinic or a medical facility and they all have community-acquired H5N1, that means there are 94 other infected people who are not very sick but may be contagious. They feel well enough to travel, to socialize, to go to work, to play with their children, to carry on with their daily lives. They will infect other people.
The virus can spread around the world before we even know it’s spreading because we can’t look for it. Those six patients will be the first of a pandemic that has already begun. It will be much, much worse than COVID-19.
A 2 percent mortality rate may seem small, but at population scale that translates to a minimum of 7 million dead Americans, with more than 150 million deaths globally. That is just from the infection. Overwhelmed health care systems, food shortages, and economic, agricultural, and environmental devastation will cause far more. This is an existential threat to human civilization as we know it.
I can’t say whether or not H5N1 will become a pandemic. I don’t know and nobody else does either. However, I do know that America and the world need the CDC more than ever.
There Is Hope
This is terribly dark and depressing, but there is hope. As I said before, these RIFs are completely illegal and unconstitutional. There is a reason they were issued on a Friday night. Vought and the Trump administration know they are completely unjustified. They don’t want people to know what they did and what the consequences will be, because they know that they are unlawful. They know their position is weak.
Yes, fired employees need to sue and take this to the courts. However, there are still court cases percolating through the justice system regarding layoffs that happened months ago. The CDC’s function is too urgent to wait. Congress must step in now and reverse this as they continue to negotiate an end to the shutdown.
This is not solely the Democrats’ responsibility, either. People dying preventable deaths is a bipartisan issue.
As Americans, we must demand that our government not enact illegal policies that will kill us. Congress must act and restore functioning public health capacity to the nation now, before we all regret it. At least, before those of us who survive do.
As a service to our readers, we curate noteworthy stories through partnerships with outside writers and thinkers. Dr. Angela Rasmussen is a virologist and co-editor in chief of Vaccine. This column has been adapted with the author’s permission from her Substack, Rasmussen Retorts.