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Home»International News»CDC cuts recommended childhood vaccines in US amid controversy
International News

CDC cuts recommended childhood vaccines in US amid controversy

info@thewitness.com.auBy info@thewitness.com.auJanuary 6, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
CDC cuts recommended childhood vaccines in US amid controversy
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“This decision protects children, respects families and rebuilds trust in public health,” Kennedy said in a statement on Monday.

Trump, reacting to the news on his Truth Social platform, said the new schedule was “far more reasonable” and “finally aligns the United States with other Developed Nations around the World”.

President Trump and Robert F. Kennedy at a Make America Healthy Again event in May.

President Trump and Robert F. Kennedy at a Make America Healthy Again event in May.Credit: AP

Among those left on the recommended-for-everyone list are vaccines against measles, whooping cough, polio, tetanus, chickenpox and human papillomavirus, or HPV. The guidance reduces the number of recommended vaccine doses against HPV from two or three shots, depending on age, to one for most children.

Medical experts said implementing such changes without what they said was public discussion or a transparent review of the data would put children at risk.

“Abandoning recommendations for vaccines that prevent influenza, hepatitis and rotavirus, and changing the recommendation for HPV without a public process to weigh the risks and benefits, will lead to more hospitalisations and preventable deaths among American children,” Michael Osterholm, of the Vaccine Integrity Project at the University of Minnesota, said.

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Sean O’Leary, from the American Academy of Pediatrics, said countries carefully considered vaccine recommendations based on levels of disease in their populations and their health systems.

“You can’t just copy and paste public health and that’s what they seem to be doing here,” O’Leary said. “Literally children’s health and children’s lives are at stake.”

Most high-income countries recommend vaccinations against a dozen to 15 serious pathogens, according to a recent review by the Vaccine Integrity Project, a group that works to safeguard vaccine use.

France recommends all children get vaccinated against 14 diseases, compared to the 11 that the US now will recommend for every child under the new schedule. Australia recommends vaccines for all children against 15 diseases.

Doctors’ groups criticise decision

O’Leary said the changes were made by political appointees, without any evidence that the current recommendations were harming children.

An annual flu vaccine is recommended for all Australians aged over six months.

An annual flu vaccine is recommended for all Australians aged over six months.Credit: Shutterstock

The paediatricians’ group has issued its own childhood vaccine schedule that its members are following, and it continues to broadly recommend vaccines that the Trump administration has demoted.

O’Leary singled out the flu vaccine, which the government and leading medical experts have long urged for nearly everyone starting at age six months. He said the government was “pretty tone-deaf” for ending its recommendation while the country was at the beginning of a severe flu season, and after 280 children died from flu last winter, the most since 2009.

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Even a disease that parents may not have heard of, rotavirus, could come roaring back if vaccination eroded, he added. That diarrheal disease once hospitalised thousands of children each winter, something that no longer happens.

The decision was made without input from an advisory committee that typically consults on the vaccine schedule, said senior officials at HHS. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorised to discuss the changes publicly.

They added that the new recommendations were a collaborative effort between federal health agencies but wouldn’t specify who was consulted.

Scientists at the CDC’s National Centre for Immunisation and Respiratory Diseases were asked to present to the agency’s political leadership about vaccine schedules in other countries in December, but were not allowed to give any recommendations and were not aware of any decisions about vaccine schedule changes, National Public Health Coalition executive director Abby Tighe said. Her group is an advocacy organisation of current and former CDC employees and their supporters.

“Changes of this magnitude require careful review, expert and public input, and clear scientific justification. That level of rigour and transparency was not part of this decision,” the American Medical Association’s Sandra Fryhofer said. “The scientific evidence remains unchanged, and the AMA supports continued access to childhood immunisations recommended by national medical specialty societies.”

Kennedy is a longtime vaccine sceptic

The move comes as Kennedy, a longtime activist against vaccines, has repeatedly used his authority in government to translate his scepticism about the shots into national guidance.

In May, he announced the CDC would no longer recommend COVID-19 vaccines for healthy children and pregnant women – a move immediately questioned by public health experts who saw no new data to justify the change.

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