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FACT FOCUS: Trump Sows Confusion on Number of Childhood Vaccinations
The CDC cut universal childhood vaccines to 11 from 17 to align with peer nations and improve vaccination rates, following a presidential directive and HHS assessment.
- On Monday, U.S. health officials announced the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will now recommend 11 vaccines instead of 17, following a directive from President Donald Trump.
- Following a Dec. 5 order, HHS officials reviewed vaccine policies and found the U.S. was a 'global outlier' among 20 developed nations, aligning with goals of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., HHS Secretary.
- Under the new guidance, some shots move to shared clinical decision-making, some vaccines target high-risk groups, and insurers will cover those recommended as of Dec. 31.
- Legal analysts noted potential violations of the Administrative Procedure Act as the change bypassed CDC's usual public vetting, while leading medical groups warn conflicting advice could risk children’s health.
- Public-Health analysts caution that U.S. vaccine schedules reflect population demographics, healthcare access and disease risk, while the American Academy of Pediatrics says prior U.S. policy saved more than 1 million lives and cut trillions in healthcare costs.
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Read Full ArticleThis is new evidence, if necessary, of the Trump administration's distrust of science: the United States is reducing the number of vaccines recommended for children, under the leadership of vaccine minister Robert Kennedy Jr. Specialists are criticizing this decision.
Coverage Details
Total News Sources50
Leaning Left13Leaning Right4Center25Last UpdatedBias Distribution60% Center
Bias Distribution
- 60% of the sources are Center
60% Center
L 31%
C 60%
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