Trump Backs HHS Overhaul Of Childhood Vaccine Schedule With New Order

President Trump is signing off on a decision from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) earlier this year to cut down on the number of required vaccinations for children.

The president endorsed these adjusted immunization requirements in an executive order on Friday. Trump cited his administration’s commitment to “protecting religious liberty and parental authority” in the order.

“Therefore, it is the policy of the United States that the core childhood vaccine schedule should be aligned with scientific evidence and best practices from peer, developed countries while preserving access to vaccines currently available to Americans and that the Federal Government will continue to protect religious freedom and enforce all legal protections for parents,” the order stated.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reduced its recommended number of vaccinations for children from 17 to 11 earlier this year. The CDC now recommends that parents and physicians should be left to determine whether children need shots for diseases like the flu, COVID-19 and rotavirus.

Shots for diseases like dengue fever, hepatitis A and B and meningitis are now only recommended for “high-risk” children.

The CDC said it will recommend children be vaccinated against diseases “for which there is international consensus.”

While only states have the power to require vaccinations, the CDC sets national standards through its immunization recommendations. The schedule also guides which vaccines are covered by insurance.

HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a vaccine skeptic, has led the push for reduced vaccine requirements for children.

The Trump official directed the CDC to alter its long-standing insistence that vaccines do not cause autism, adding in wording that health authorities have ignored this link.

The CDC’s decision followed another executive mandate from Trump for health officials to compare and evaluate the U.S.’s childhood vaccine schedule with “peer nations.”

“After an exhaustive review of the evidence, we are aligning the U.S. childhood vaccine schedule with international consensus while strengthening transparency and informed consent,” Kennedy said in a statement. “This decision protects children, respects families, and rebuilds trust in public health.”

 

Source Link 

Recommended Articles

IRS Unveils New Health Savings Account Limits For 2027

The IRS has released the 2027 contribution limits for health savings accounts, or HSAs, which offer triple-tax benefits for investors. Starting in 2027, the new HSA contribution limit will be $4,500 for self-only plans, up from $4,400 in 2026, based on the latest inflation adjustments. The HSA limit for family coverage will also rise in 2027. That cap will jump to $9,000, ...

Read More

China’s Rise in Drug Development Looms Over U.S.

For decades, an annual gathering of oncologists has featured drug trials that were run mainly at American and European hospitals.   But at this year’s meeting, which was held in Chicago over the weekend, the signs are everywhere of China’s ascendance as a powerhouse in drug development — and of the threat that many believe ...

Read More

UnitedHealthcare To Cut Pediatric Prior Authorization Requirements By Two-Thirds

UnitedHealth’s main health insurance business says it will reduce the number of prior authorization requirements for patients under 18 by about two-thirds by Dec. 31. UnitedHealthcare will cut prior authorization requirements for commercial health plans, as well as for Medicaid plans, and the shift will affect reviews for many diagnostic services and routine surgical procedures, ...

Read More

Telehealth Booms as Demand for GLP-1s Surges and Questions Mount About Safety, Oversight

Within 24 hours of injecting the first dose of a weight loss medication she received following a visit with a telehealth doctor, Karleigh McClain was admitted to the hospital, she said. The 31-year-old compliance consultant from Hendersonville, Tennessee, said she couldn’t stop vomiting. “Sunday morning, it all hits,” McClain recalled, as she described what happened ...

Read More
arrowcaret-downclosefacebook-squarehamburgerinstagram-squarelinkedin-squarepauseplaytwitter-squareyoutube-square