BERLIN — The German government has sharply rejected accusations by U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. claiming that it has been sidelining patient autonomy, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic.
''The statements made by the US Secretary of Health are completely unfounded, factually incorrect, and must be rejected,'' German Health Minister Nina Warken said in a statement late Saturday.
Kennedy said in a video post earlier on Saturday that he had sent the German minister a letter based on reports coming out of Germany that the government was ''limiting people's abilities to act on their own convictions when they face medical decisions.''
The American health secretary said that ''I've learned that more than a thousand German physicians and thousands of their patients now face prosecution and punishment for issuing exemptions from wearing masks or getting COVID-19 vaccines during the pandemic."
Warken rejected Kennedy's claims, saying that ''during the coronavirus pandemic, there was never any obligation on the medical profession to administer COVID-19 vaccinations. Anyone who did not want to offer vaccinations for medical, ethical, or personal reasons was not liable to prosecution, nor did they have to fear sanctions.''
Kennedy did not give provide specific examples or say which reports he was referring to but added that ''in my letter, I explained that Germany is targeting physicians who put their patients first and punishing citizens for making their own medical choices.''
He concluded that "the German government is now violating the sacred patient physician relationship, replacing it is a dangerous system that makes physicians enforcers of state policies.''
Kennedy said that in his letter he made clear that ''Germany has the opportunity and the responsibility to correct this trajectory, to restore medical autonomy, to end politically motivated prosecutions.''