WHO Pandemic Treaty Update

Story at a Glance:

  • A “pandemic treaty” was proposed in 2022, scheduled to be presented for adoption at the WHO’s World Health Assembly in 2024.

  • The International Negotiating Body (INB) is meeting the last week of February to discuss the Zero Draft, or first rough draft, of the treaty. This is not the meeting where the treaty will be signed; that is set for 2024.

  • Simultaneously, the existing International Health Regulations (IHR) are also scheduled to be updated at the 2024 meeting; over 300 amendments are being considered right now (including those proposed last year by the U.S. that were widely considered withdrawn, but were not).

  • Other international agreements are falling into place (like the Bali Declaration) that will strengthen a global health security state, with the idea that the treaty will tie it all up like a bow.

  • This is all happening at once and quickly. Americans are calling on Congress to check the power of the president on these international agreements that are collectively a wrecking ball to the U.S. Constitution.

Refresh: You can find all of Stand for Health Freedom’s reporting and resources on the WHO at our WHO resources page. It includes quick print PDFs about the treaty’s threat to U.S. sovereignty, and about U.S.-proposed amendments to the WHO, interviews with our Policy Analyst, and an ever-growing repository of articles and analysis about the global health security state. 

The pandemic treaty has been decades in the making

The World Health Organization (WHO) is poised to become a central hub for globalist control using public health for its power grab. The WHO is the United Nations’ health agency, and its reach and authority have been expanding rapidly in the last two decades. The WHO was created in 1948 with the public understanding it would be a hub for information to support countries around the world in their own public health decisions. Its activities were limited to only specified diseases at times of outbreak. Today, however, the WHO can declare pandemics and monitor countries and individuals for the possibility of outbreaks. The one thing it can’t do yet is enforce its authority; it has no teeth. This is where the pandemic treaty and changes to its current regulations come in, and why it’s so important for the U.S. to stand against giving more power to the UN’s World Health Organization.

The Biden administration is making huge efforts to solidify the WHO as a central governing body in the name of global health security. In fact, President Biden has been a proponent of strengthening the UN and of global health security since he took office as a senator in 1972. You can learn about his thoughts on America’s “proper role” in the new world order, where he declares the U.S. “must exercise a diplomatic leadership that puts new muscle into institutions of collective security” in an Op-Ed he penned for the Wall Street Journal in 1992. It’s called, “How I Learned to Love the New World Order” and it was written while he was chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

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As senator he sponsored S2487, the Global Pathogen Surveillance Act of 2002. And he co-sponsored a bill that would have created a U.S. National Director of Pandemic Preparedness and Response, S1821, that cited WHO declarations and proposed a “pandemic fund” to be presented to the WHO. He also co-sponsored the Vaccines for the New Millenium Act, which proposed to create international funding mechanisms for development and manufacture of vaccines. This act specified working with organizations like the World Bank and the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI) to make advance purchases of vaccines It also  called on the president to “address the issue of regulatory approval” of vaccines, specifically stating that could happen through the FDA, the WHO, or another international body. None of these bills passed, but they show a long history of commitment to global health security, which has culminated in this moment in history, with Biden ready to see his life’s work come to fruition  with the stroke of a pen.

His friendliness toward increased global authority was amplified during his time in the vice presidency under Barack Obama. In 2016, then-President Obama issued an executive order: Advancing the Global Health Security Agenda to Achieve a World Safe and Secure from Infectious Disease Threats. The executive order explicitly stated, “The roles, responsibilities, and activities described in this order will support the goals of the International Health Regulations,” and it would be carried out in coordination with international organizations such as the WHO, the UN, and the International Criminal Police Organization (INTERPOL). The order was a response to the Global Health Security Agenda international effort to increase disease surveillance and “security,” which is strikingly similar to the WHO plans today. This agenda however, was not a treaty or legally binding agreement. 

In 2021, one of President Biden’s first acts in the Oval Office was to issue an executive order on Organizing and Mobilizing the United States Government to Provide a Unified and Effective Response to Combat COVID-19 and to Provide United States Leadership on Global Health and Security. This order accompanied his re-commitment of the United States’ participation in the WHO, which former President Trump had withdrawn. In fact, the order declares the federal government’s efforts in “engaging with and strengthening the World Health Organization.” Biden also “reconvened” a Global Health Security Agenda Interagency Review Council that had been created in the 2016 executive order cited above, when Biden was Vice President.

If nothing else, you can admire Biden’s unwavering commitment to a globalist vision. In 1992, he wanted the U.S. to “breathe life into the UN Charter” to give it more power. Today, he wants the UN’s World Health Organization to have more power over independent nations and is behind the U.S. proposal for it to have a “Compliance Committee.” Is that in the best interest of Americans? Would an unaccountable, unelected “Compliance Committee” for international laws that Americans have no say in, uphold the U.S. Constitution or destroy it?

Global health security goes well beyond the WHO

Plans for a global health security state are not new. They have been in the works for decades. Consider these words from Bill Gates about “The Next Epidemic” after Ebola, published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2015:

“Through the United Nations, some global institution could be empowered and funded to coordinate the system. The United Nations and the WHO are studying the lessons from the Ebola epidemic and ways to improve international crisis management; these evaluations can provide a starting point for discussions of ways to strengthen the WHO’s capacity and about which parts of the process it should lead and which ones others (including the World Bank and the G7 countries) should lead in close coordination. The conversation should include military alliances such as NATO, which should make epidemic response a priority. The final arrangement should include a reserve corps of experts with the broad range of skills needed in an epidemic.”

You can see that the vision for what is being put into place right now setting up the World Health Organization as a global health security hub has been promoted and nurtured for decades by very powerful people running or influencing countries and international organizations. Note that Bill Gates is a powerhouse behind GAVI, mentioned above in the vaccine bill co-sponsored by then-Senator Biden. 

At the WHO, the Working Group on the amendments to the IHR understand their job is not being done in a vacuum. There are many different arms of the global health security octopus, spanning different government or private organizations as well as various international agreements. In a recent document analyzing the amendments proposed to the IHR, they provide a great summary.

IHR amendments update

The International Health Regulations (IHR) already exists, and it’s one avenue already in place for expanding the authority and reach of the WHO. The IHR is recognized as “crucial to improving the global health security architecture” by those analyzing amendments to the document. The last time it was amended was 2005, and even though it greatly expanded the scope of what the WHO could do, the Senate was not consulted. The amendments happened on the heels of the September 11th, 2001, terrorist attacks in the U.S. which were quickly followed by a scare of bioterrorism created by anthrax found in federal facilities, and then a declared pandemic of SARS in 2003. Those holding the globalist vision rode the waves of anxiety and fear generated by those events right to the World Health Assembly with amendments that created the new ability for the WHO to declare a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC), and solidified authority for the WHO to initiate investigations in a country suspected of having an outbreak before any reports are made by their government. The threats to national sovereignty were noted by some, but largely went unnoticed and were not reported by news outlets.

In 2022, the United States proposed 13 amendments to the IHR, which were met with global backlash. Many people believed the U.S. withdrew their amendments, but they did not. They were simply taken off the table for the May 2022 meeting, so there could be more discussion and input from other WHO participating nations. They were resubmitted in September 2022 to a newly formed committee for consideration and review. (You can refresh your memory on the amendments at Did we win against the WHO?, or at SHF’s printable resource summarizing them, as the amendments were resubmitted unchanged.)

Interestingly, the Review Committee for the IHR noted that “during a public health emergency of international concern, the regulations may work better if they are not mandatory and [the Committee] advises against changing the nature of the recommendations.”

In its report analyzing all of the submitted amendments, the Review Committee gave pushback on some U.S.-proposed amendments, including those that would lower the threshold of necessary information on outbreaks before the WHO would investigate or make declarations. It noted, ”removing the requirement for WHO to verify the information it has received from other reports with the State Party in which the event allegedly occurs may reduce the availability of relevant information for WHO’s consideration and may also affect the relationship between WHO and the State Party.”

The report also noted that a proposed reduction in time to investigate or respond is “likely to be unrealistic,” and basically rejected the massive expanse of unilateral power proposed by the U.S. to expand the ability to declare emergencies to include “regional” or “intermediate” alerts. This report has been submitted to a Working Group for the IHR (WGIHR) which will meet periodically to consolidate the amendments to present for adoption at the 2024 World Health Assembly. The second meeting of the WGIHR, where they will discuss the Review Committee’s report, is scheduled to occur in the days before the INB meets again to discuss the Zero Draft of the pandemic treaty.

Pandemic treaty update

A working Zero Draft of the pandemic treaty was recently released, ahead of the fourth meeting of the International Negotiating Body (INB), which is the committee tasked with creating the document to present to the World Health Assembly for adoption in May 2024. The WHO is calling it the “WHO CA+”. This stands for the “convention, agreement, or other international agreement,” which is a deliberate wording that can only be interpreted as a word game to try to reduce the amount of scrutiny governments will give it. In the U.S., the Constitution requires treaties have Senate input, oversight, and ultimate say in whether the U.S. should sign on by a ⅔ majority. But the vast majority of international agreements, over 90%, do not go through the Senate. These are known as “executive agreements.” We have every reason to believe President Biden will act as if the treaty is an agreement he is already authorized to sign, trying to bypass approval of Congress and with it, the will of the American people.

Not surprisingly, the document is full of concerning provisions that would threaten American sovereignty, transfer massive amounts of tax dollars to or through the WHO, and endanger the health of Americans.

Summary of provisions in the pandemic treaty Zero Draft

  1. This document could trump or prohibit other international agreements. Countries are allowed to make other agreements, only “provided that such instruments are compatible with their obligations under the WHO CA+.” What happens if an agreement is not “compatible”? 
  2. A “global compensation program” for pandemic vaccine injuries is proposed. There have been discussions of removing liability from manufacturers at a global level. This is horribly worrying, since it mirrors the 1986 Act and the PREP Act in the U.S., which removed liability from vaccine manufacturers. The PREP Act’s CICP has left hundreds of thousands of Americans without recourse if they are injured by these medical products, and this treaty would expand that to a global scale. 
  3. It would create a new “WHO Global Pandemic Supply Chain and Logistics Network” that would be sustained in “inter-pandemic times” and scaled up during declared pandemics.
  4. The agreement would encourage and incentivize transfer of “technology and know-how” to manufacturers, “information sharing through open science approaches,” and require recipients of public funding for research to share data and reveal contract terms. It would create a new WHO Pathogen Access and Benefit-Sharing System” where parties would upload genetic sequences of pathogens deemed potentially pandemic to a central database controlled by the WHO. Notably, the PABS system would require nations to adopt and implement laws to recognize its use.
  5. It would greatly bolster the health data of Americans going to an unelected, unaccountable global body. 
  6. It could take suppression of speech of Americans to a global level as the WHO will “counteract misinformation, disinformation, and false news,” while also strengthening “research into the behavioral barriers and drivers of adherence to public health measures, confidence and uptake of vaccines, use of therapeutics and trust in science and government institutions.” It encourages regular screenings of the population for “misinformation” through “regular social listening and analysis.” It would require nations to “contribute to research and inform policies on factors that hinder adherence to public health and social measures, confidence and uptake of vaccines…” Where is the room for any individual to question a policy, or the safety of a vaccine?
  7. The WHO would have a say in how we spend American tax dollars domestically. The draft requires nations to set aside a minimum of 5% of its health budget for pandemic prevention, preparedness, response, and health systems…and working to achieve universal health coverage.” It also proposes a set percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) for “international cooperation” on pandemics.
  8. The document proclaims that there is a “need for resilient health systems, rooted in universal health coverage,” to stop health systems from being overwhelmed in a pandemic. “The Parties shall strive to accelerate the achievement of universal health coverage.” How can a country who has voted down universal health care time and time again comply with this agreement? Part of the UN Sustainable Development Goals, and of course the WHO mission (being the health agency within the UN), is universal health coverage for all people. This is not the system the U.S. has, but there are never-ending attempts at it, and even last year a committee met to discuss barriers to universal health care again. Loyce Pace announced to the World Health Assembly in 2022 that the U.S. is working toward universal health care. Are we?
  9. The agreement directs nations to “strengthen its national public health and social policies…including mobilizing social capital in communities for mutual support.” In other words, the global unelected body is encouraging countries to use its people as assets to roll out the determined public health measures. In the U.S., this is already taking shape through training of “trusted” members of communities such as pastors, teachers, and hairdressers. 
  10. It moves money from richer countries to poorer ones, requiring member states to finance other health systems to build their capacity.
  11. It creates a governing board of unelected officials, (which was referred to as “supreme” in an advance copy of the Zero Draft), which would be advised by a new “Consultative Body” which would include representatives of the United Nations, and be open to organizations or individuals in the public or private sector. 
  12. Most troublesome, the document gives authority to the Governing Body to address compliance and non-compliance with the treaty, but does not lay out any enforcement provisions, essentially giving a blank check to this unelected arm of the UN over U.S. actions. Further, amendments to the document could be made at any time by the Governing Body. Unlike other WHO documents, including the IHR, no exceptions or reservations would be allowed. This is a huge reason why  these documents cannot be signed without the advice and consent of the Senate. This is not an executive agreement. It will have major impacts on the lives of Americans, U.S. policy, the relationships we have with other countries, and how our tax dollars are spent.

This document will be the icing on the cake after potential IHR amendments (which will be the missing teeth). It could be argued that the 2005 IHR Amendments should also have been examined by the Senate. This next round of amendments will commit even more money and policy decisions to an unelected global body.

Conclusion 

Many Americans are concerned that the international agreements would override American sovereignty. Given the record of the current president, Americans have reason to worry. Lawmakers have concerns as well, and have filed bills in both the House and the Senate to stop the global health security train: to withdraw from the WHO entirely, to defund the WHO, or to put into law that the U.S. cannot sign onto a pandemic treaty without advice and consent of the Senate. 

The president’s power to make international agreements is checked by Congress. It’s time for Americans to call on our lawmakers to educate them as to (1) what is going on, (2) how quickly it is moving, and (3) help them understand how urgent it is to support legislation to stop the WHO power grab, and not allow the president to ignore the Constitution by signing international agreements that would destroy what it stands for. Ultimately, Congress needs to know that this is of utmost importance to you, to the American voter.

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Steps you can take

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Step One: Americans need to make sure their elected officials understand the urgency and severity of global health plans. Click the button below to send letters both to your congresspeople and to the House Foreign Relations Committee to support HR79, the WHO Withdrawal Act

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Step Two:  You can also sign our petition to lawmakers showing your support as they fight the White House plan to strengthen the WHO, when instead we should be protecting Americans against a global health security power grab.

References & Sources

Hidden Toggle
[i] https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/11/16/g20-bali-leaders-declaration/

[ii] https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/11/16/g20-bali-leaders-declaration/

[iii] https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/546705-white-house-rules-out-involvement-in-vaccine-passports/

[iv] https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/biden-mayorkas-requiring-vaccine-passports-international-travel

[v] https://www.axios.com/2021/05/28/biden-covid-vaccine-passport-mayorkas-travel

[vi] https://www.gihub.org/about/about/

[vii] https://www.cigionline.org/publications/g7-g8-g20-evolution-global-governance/

[viii] To read more, and keep up to date on state laws, check out Ballotopedia.org for a great user-friendly list of proof-of-vaccination requirements throughout the 50 states, complete with interactive map and timelines. https://ballotpedia.org/State_government_policies_about_vaccine_requirements_(vaccine_passports)

[ix] https://vaxxter.com/real-ids-cards-and-government-tracking/

[x] https://iapp.org/news/a/why-some-states-wont-comply-with-real-id-requirements/

[xi] https://www.pressherald.com/2019/07/02/mainers-can-now-get-real-id-compliant-drivers-licenses/

[xii] https://cis.org/Arthur/DHS-Announces-50-States-Are-Compliant-REAL-ID-Act

[xiii] https://iapp.org/news/a/why-some-states-wont-comply-with-real-id-requirements/

[xiv] https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2021/09/apple-announces-first-states-to-adopt-drivers-licenses-and-state-ids-in-wallet/

[xv] https://www.wired.com/story/microsoft-decentralized-id-blockchain/

[xvi] https://www.wired.com/story/microsoft-decentralized-id-blockchain/

[xvii] https://documents-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N15/291/89/PDF/N1529189.pdf?OpenElement

[xviii] https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/06/16/most-bidens-top-white-house-staff-worked-obama-and-female/7706857002/

[xix] https://documents-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N15/291/89/PDF/N1529189.pdf?OpenElement

[xx] https://unstats.un.org/legal-identity-agenda/documents/UN-Strategy-for-LIA.pdf

[xxi] https://unstats.un.org/legal-identity-agenda/documents/UN-Strategy-for-LIA.pdf

References & Sources

[i] Mullard, A. Vaccine failure explained. Nature (2008). https://doi.org/10.1038/news.2008.1302

[ii] https://history.nih.gov/display/history/Chanock%2C+Robert+2001+B

[iii] Kim, H. W., CANCHOLA, J. G., Brandt, C. D., Pyles, G., Chanock, R. M., Jensen, K., & Parrott, R. H. (1969). Respiratory syncytial virus disease in infants despite prior administration of antigenic inactivated vaccine. American journal of epidemiology89(4), 422-434. Available at http://sa.uploads.ru/SU2xL.pdf, accessed January 10, 2023.

[iv] https://media.path.org/documents/PATH-AMIRoadmap_01.16.19_web.pdf

[v] RSV Clinical Tracker, https://www.path.org/resources/rsv-and-mab-trial-tracker/

[vi] Kim, H. W., CANCHOLA, J. G., Brandt, C. D., Pyles, G., Chanock, R. M., Jensen, K., & Parrott, R. H. (1969). Respiratory syncytial virus disease in infants despite prior administration of antigenic inactivated vaccine. American journal of epidemiology89(4), 422-434. Available at http://sa.uploads.ru/SU2xL.pdf, accessed January 10, 2023.

[vii] KAPIKIAN, A. Z., MITCHELL, R. H., CHANOCK, R. M., SHVEDOFF, R. A., & STEWART, C. E. (1969). An epidemiologic study of altered clinical reactivity to respiratory syncytial (RS) virus infection in children previously vaccinated with an inactivated RS virus vaccine. American journal of epidemiology89(4), 405-421. Available at http://s2.uploads.ru/MQhdS.pdf, accessed January 10, 2023.

[viii] Mullard, A. Vaccine failure explained. Nature (2008). https://doi.org/10.1038/news.2008.1302

[ix] https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04605159

[x] https://www.gsk.com/en-gb/media/press-releases/gsk-provides-update-on-phase-iii-rsv-maternal-vaccine-candidate-programme/

[xi] https://www.uspresidentialelectionnews.com/2021/12/forget-55-years-fda-now-says-will-take-75-years-to-release-pfizer-covid-vaccine-data/

[xii] https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/acip/meetings/downloads/slides-2022-10-19-20/02-RSV-Mat-Ped-Felter-508.pdf

[xiii] https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/acip/meetings/downloads/slides-2022-10-19-20/03-RSV-Mat-Ped-Jones-508.pdf

[xiv] https://edition.cnn.com/2022/11/01/health/rsv-vaccine-pfizer-fda/index.html

[xv] https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/chimpanzees-children-origins-respiratory-syncytial-virus/

[xvi]https://web.archive.org/web/20061001201924/http://www3.niaid.nih.gov/labs/aboutlabs/lid/respiratoryVirusesSection/chanock.htm

[xvii] https://history.nih.gov/display/history/Chanock%2C+Robert+2001+C

[xviii] https://www.acog.org/education-and-events/webinars/respiratory-syncytial-virus

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Scott Kiley

Associate Director of Local Advocacy

Scott Kiley has been married to Jill Kiley for 37 years. Together they have 3 children, 3 grandchildren and reside in Florida. He is an entrepreneur having founded several businesses, one that remains today.

In battling the tyranny that unfolded during the Covid pandemic, Scott uses his organizational and entrepreneurial skills to focus on health care freedom. Scott and his wife Jill organize health freedom advocates in an effort to deliver meaningful change at a local level. Doctors, attorneys, nurses and passionate health freedom warriors make up the team. The advocates focus on their local county commissioners, city council members, school board members, sheriff and police. The advocacy work is always collaborative, respectful and educational while bring real change that enhances health care freedom. Team effort success has come in the form of local legislation through resolutions and ordinances.

Scott and his wife Jill share a vision of uniting every county within their state of Florida and using this unity to bring change in Tallahassee.

Jill Kiley

Associate Director of Local Advocacy

Jill earned her undergraduate degree in Psychology from Southern Illinois University and a master’s in Clinical Social Work from the University of Illinois-Chicago. As a Youth and family therapist, mother of three, and grandmother, Jill has always stayed abreast of health issues affecting our society’s physical and mental well-being.

During the COVID lockdowns, she realized that the gaslighting of the public and the straying from evidence-based medical advice from our medical authorities needed to be questioned. The flawed science around the pretrials of the COVID-19 vaccines was alarming!  Jill and her husband, Scott, decided they needed to stand up and fight back locally against the deceptive narrative invoked against our society and continue advocating for our God-given rights

Jill and her husband, Scott, have become the local conduits of truth in a society of censorship. They have coordinated with activists in their community to educate local officials, resulting in impactful changes to local legislation to protect residents and their freedoms. “Bringing Truth to Light gracefully, opens doors to dialog and spurs curiosity for truth.”

Jill Hines

Directory of Advocacy
A former banker turned homeschool mom, Jill Hines began researching alternatives to conventional medicine in 2010 and what she discovered changed the trajectory of her life. She corrected a worrisome health issue, and embraced a natural approach to wellness. Advocating for informed consent and parental rights became a full-time mission when she joined the board of the Georgia Coalition for Vaccine Choice and later became the co-director of Health Freedom Louisiana. Due to her advocacy efforts during the COVID crisis, Jill was one of 25 Louisianans selected by Central City News as “a hero of the constitutional crisis.” She was also presented the Impact Award for Outstanding Public Service from the government watchdog organization Citizens for a New Louisiana. Jill now represents hundreds of millions of Americans who experienced censorship due to the Biden administration's efforts to suppress disfavored speech as a plaintiff in the landmark lawsuit Missouri v. Biden. Jill holds a marketing degree from Louisiana Tech University and now passionately “sells” health freedom full-time. Serving as Stand for Health Freedom’s advocacy director provides an incredible opportunity to advance the growing movement to preserve the sacred right to refuse unwanted medical interventions for ourselves and our children without fear of retribution.
“We have lived through a terrifying societal, psychological, and medical experiment which afforded us a knowledge that our forefathers tried to impart and we can no longer ignore: Our freedom is tenuous. For our children’s sake, the time is now to take a stand for health freedom.”

Chrissy Scott

Executive Assistant and Social Media Manager

A labor and delivery nurse with a lifelong passion for maternal and fetal health, Chrissy Scott left her job of 19 years after learning the truth about the harms caused by the medical system. In 2009, she was mandated by her employer to receive the H1N1 vaccine during her first trimester of pregnancy with her second child. She was assured that the vaccine was “safe and effective” for pregnant women, but her son was born with a kidney defect that could have been fatal. She didn’t connect the dots to vaccine injury until several years later when the declining health of her oldest son drove her to seek answers outside of allopathic medicine.

This personal journey ignited in her a new passion for truth and transparency in health care. As SHF’s Executive Assistant, Chrissy facilitates communication and local advocacy initiatives alongside Leah Wilson for their home state of Indiana. She also manages and creates graphics for SHF’s social media accounts and the website’s swag shop.

Chrissy earned her nursing degree from Anderson University and served her entire career at her local hospital. While she’s no longer a floor nurse, her five very active boys frequently test her nursing skills! She homeschools her children and has been co-owner of a successful home décor sign business with her sister.

“Parents, being the experts on their own children, are best suited to make decisions for the well-being of their family. To do this properly, they must be given full and accurate information and be free from force or coercion.”

Ellen Chappelle

Writer/Editor

Ellen Chappelle serves as SHF’s resident wordsmith. A seasoned writer and editor, she’s enthusiastic about ensuring that our content is clear, concise, and inspiring.

Ellen is most energized by working on projects that transform lives. A truth seeker as well as a journalist, she’s disturbed by the lack of accuracy in today’s media and determined to help share fact rather than fiction. And having found greater healing with alternative approaches, she’s also passionate about preserving our freedom to make informed health choices.

Past projects include serving as regional editor of a dog magazine, color and trend specialist for a small cosmetics company, arts columnist, newspaper reporter, ghostwriter, and creator of website content for artists and small businesses.

With a degree in journalism and theatre, Ellen is also a performer. She enjoyed singing and dancing on a cruise ship and traveling with a national musical theatre tour, as well as recording industrial videos, television commercials, and radio voiceovers. She also creates handcrafted jewelry in wire, chain maille, and fused glass.

“Despite what some would have us believe, the fact remains that this nation was founded on biblical principles by people who wanted freedom to worship God and live their lives without government involvement. It’s never been more critical to fight for those rights.”

LEAH WILSON

Executive Director and Co-founder

An attorney with a background in complex litigation and advocacy, Leah Wilson is passionate about children’s health and has researched and worked on child welfare issues for more than a decade.

The overmedication of children in foster care as a form of behavior management is what compelled Leah to become an advocate and foster parent. During her time as a court-appointed special advocate for abused and neglected children, Leah witnessed the rampant use of psychiatric drugs among foster kids. She also discovered that, in addition to many extensive requirements, the state had a policy that all foster children and foster families be fully vaccinated, without exception. Through her involvement in law, health and the foster care system, it became abundantly clear to Leah that the single most important issue affecting child welfare in the United States is the practice of one-size-fits-all medicine via medical mandates. This motivated Leah to expand her advocacy beyond foster care to all children nationwide and to start Stand for Health Freedom (SHF) in 2019.

A graduate of the Saint Louis University School of Law, Leah holds dual bachelor degrees in political science and Spanish from Indiana University. In addition to her advocacy work with SHF, Leah is the owner and former operations director of MaxLiving Indy, one of the largest natural health centers in the Midwest. She is also an educator on holistic health as well as a sought-after speaker on issues ranging from religious rights to greening your home.

“Parental rights and religious freedom are God-given natural rights that cannot arbitrarily be taken away by government authorities. Parents are the single most important factor in a child’s success; I stand in full support of this sacred relationship.”

Sayer JI

Director and Co-founder

Sayer Ji is a widely recognized researcher, author, lecturer, activist, and educator on natural health modalities. Among his many roles, he is an advisor to Stand for Health Freedom, a reviewer and editor of the International Journal of Human Nutrition and Functional Medicine, an advisory board member of the National Health Federation, a steering committee member of the Global GMO Free Coalition, and the co-founder and CEO of Systome Biomed Inc., a revolutionary scientific validation framework.

Most notably, Sayer is the founder of Greenmedinfo.com, the world’s most widely referenced, evidence-based natural health resource of its kind. He founded the platform in 2008 to provide an open access, evidence-based resource supporting natural and integrative modalities. Today, Greenmedinfo.com has more than a million visits per month, serving as a trusted resource on myriad health and wellness topics to physicians, healthcare practitioners, clinicians, researchers and consumers worldwide.

Sayer attended Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, where he studied under the notable American philosopher Dr. Bruce W. Wilshire. He received a Bachelor of Arts in philosophy in 1995, with a focus on the philosophy of science. His new book, Regenerate: Unlocking Your Body’s Radical Resilience through the New Biology, was released in March 2020 and is an Amazon bestseller.

“I truly believe that education will be our greatest shield against accelerating the erosion of civil liberties, including the right to bodily sovereignty, as well as the greatest catalyst for positive change on this planet moving forward.”

Bailey Kuykendoll

Associate Director

Designer and visual marketer Bailey Kuykendoll began advocating for health and religious freedom and parental rights in 2014 after learning she was pregnant. A self-described skeptic, she’s not afraid to ask questions and do copious amounts of research to reach her own conclusions.

She’s also not afraid of hard work. As SHF’s Associate Director, Bailey truly keeps the organizational boat afloat. Working closely with our State Directors in each state, she ensures that SHF has calls-to-action for health-freedom bills and petitions on our website and across social media, spreading the word to encourage people to contact their legislators. She builds campaigns, graphics, website pages, and relationships.

Bailey earned a design degree from Harrington Institute of Design in 2008. She then served as a production assistant on several shows for HGTV, followed by working behind the scenes on the X Factor, small indie films, music videos, and documentaries. Bailey joined Health Freedom Florida after moving to the East Coast, becoming co-president of the grassroots organization in 2019. While at Health Freedom Florida, she successfully filed a state bill designed to stop discrimination based on your health status. She joined SHF in the fall of 2020.

“God placed a calling on my heart back in 2008 to be a part of something bigger for Him. Twelve years later, the opportunity came knocking to help others lean into their natural-born rights and take a stand for themselves and their families. I knew this is where I was called to be, and I have never looked back.”

Valerie Borek

POLICY ANALYST

Valerie Borek is a passionate advocate for health rights and family privacy. A mother of two with degrees in law and biochemistry, she is perfectly positioned to lead SHF advocates through complex health-rights policy. Her work is guided by a love for American values, uncovering truth, and a passion for empowering others. Valerie has served as SHF’s policy analyst since 2021.

Valerie’s understanding of the value of freedom to make one’s own health care choices is not just academic. Health freedom has kept her boys alive and thriving. Her choice to have home births jump-started her advocacy for health privacy. Her eldest son survived a rare and deadly cancer because her family was able to navigate medical care while holding onto values that were sometimes at odds with recommendations.

Before joining SHF, Valerie specialized in health and parenting rights at her boutique law firm, especially surrounding birth and vaccine rights. She advocated for informed consent in health care and transparent food labeling in her state. She helped found the Birth Rights Bar Association and was honored to present their argument to the Delaware Supreme Court that midwifery is not the practice of medicine, in support of a trailblazing midwife.

“Health is the foundation of how we show up in this world to love, serve, and create. Americans are blessed to live in a country that gets stronger the more we protect fundamental rights, like informed consent and privacy, so individuals and families can thrive.”

Mary Katherine LaCroix

DIRECTOR OF DEVELOPMENT AND NONPROFIT ADMINISTRATION

Mary Katherine LaCroix became involved with SHF as a volunteer in 2019 when the religious exemption for childhood vaccines was at risk in her home state of New Jersey. She believes strongly that parents have the responsibility for their children’s health, education, and faith formation and that only they have the right to make medical decisions and manage their care.

She has worked in fundraising for more than 25 years at various educational, cultural, human services, and political organizations. A graduate of the University of Scranton, she holds a degree in History and English Literature.

Mary Katherine is thrilled to have this opportunity to work with and help grow SHF, believing that together we can achieve even greater impact in protecting our rights and caring for our loved ones. She enjoys spending time with her husband, two children and large extended family, as well as volunteering to support the special needs community.

“Parents are taught that they must trust the experts. That’s what we did, until we learned that the experts can be wrong and don’t always know what is best for your child. Parents should instead feel empowered by their natural, God-given ability to advocate and care for their children. SHF is here to give them the tools to do just that.”

Sheila Ealey

Political Analyst

Dr. Sheila Lewis Ealey is the founder and former director of the Creative Learning Center of Louisiana, a therapeutic day school for children who are on the autism spectrum or struggling with other nonverbal intellectual disabilities. The wife of a former U.S. Coast Guard Officer, she is also the mother of four children. Her son was diagnosed with severe autism spectrum disorder at 18 months. He is now a young man and considered moderate and emerging.

Sheila and her twins were featured in the documentary “Vaxxed.” She has traveled extensively, advocating for medical freedom. She continues to educate disenfranchised parents about their fundamental rights to religious and philosophical exemptions, their ability to live sustainably on a limited budget, and the importance of nutrition and biomedical interventions for optimum health with autism. She also writes individual homeschool curriculums for parents of children with autism or intellectual disorders. Sheila is a trustee for the Autism Trust, USA, and on the board of directors of Children’s Health Defense.

Over the past 20 years, she has educated herself to use natural healing modalities for the body and brain. Her formal education includes degrees in communication, special education curriculum, and a doctorate in Educational Leadership in Special Education. Sheila serves as an assistant content advisor and political analyst for SHF.

“It is not the Constitution’s job to protect our liberties, as it is not a philosophical document but a legal one. Its purpose is to limit the powers and authority of our federal government in hopes of preventing an intrusion upon our unalienable rights. We are obliged to maintain our government within its limits.”

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