Congratulations
to MAHA, RFK, The Trump Administration, the United States of America
parents and our future generations for this monumental achievement. It
is a great beginning to make America Healthy again, given that
unvaccinated children are by far healthier than vaccinated. Imagine we
went from the figuratively “burning at the stake” of “anti- vaxxers” to
this day.
Some
day doctors like Dr Paul Thomas from Oregon will be the historic
“saints” of our profession. He was one of the doctors showing that
unvaccinated children are far healthier than the vaccinated. His career
was ruined for doing the right thing.
Oregon anti-vax doctor files $35M defamation suit
Dr.
Paul Thomas' medical license was suspended by the Oregon Medical Board
in 2020 for his “grossly negligent" failure to adequately vaccinate kids
in his care.
Given
the Big Pharma grip on politicians, the medical establishment, the
corruption, the fake news media - all of this adversity - this is a huge
win against so much money and against such odds. To inject less
undeclared toxic metals, other harmful ingredients into our children is
huge. I look forward to the day when the entire vaccine industry will be
a nightmare memory of unimaginable cruelty towards our children - that
we have evolved out of completely because the natural healing
technologies available are no longer suppressed and biological warfare
against the population has been stopped.
This
shows that common sense and tenacity, the standing up of the people can
make a huge difference against those who choose to poison us with
vaccines, our food, water and the air we breathe.
Bravo! Great Win! Great celebration for the vision of unpolluted health for humanity.
Keep Going! Keep fighting!
After
a scientific review of the underlying science, comparing the U.S. child
and adolescent immunization schedule with those of peer, developed
nations, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Acting Director Jim
O’Neill has updated the U.S. childhood immunization schedule. The CDC
will continue to recommend that all children are immunized against 10
diseases for which there is international consensus, as well as
varicella (chickenpox). For other diseases, the CDC will recommend
immunization for high-risk groups and populations, or through shared
clinical decision making when it is not possible for public health
authorities to clearly define who will benefit from an immunization. The
updated schedule is in contrast to the CDC child and adolescent
schedule at the end of 2024, which recommended 17 immunizations for all
children.
The updated CDC childhood immunization schedule:
Recommends all vaccines for which there is consensus among peer nations.
Allows
for more flexibility and choice, with less coercion, by reassigning
non-consensus vaccines to certain high-risk groups or populations and
shared clinical decision-making.
Ensures
that all the diseases covered by the previous immunization schedule
will still be available to anyone who wants them through Affordable Care
Act insurance plans and federal insurance programs, including Medicaid,
the Children’s Health Insurance Program, and the Vaccines for Children
program. Families will not have to purchase them out of pocket. Among
peer nations, the U.S. will continue to offer the most childhood
vaccines for free to those who want them.
Is
accompanied by a strengthening of vaccine research through HHS’
commitment to double-blind placebo controlled randomized trials as well
as more observational studies to evaluate long-term effects of
individual vaccines and the vaccine schedule.
Scientific Review
In
2024, the U.S. recommended more childhood vaccine doses than any other
peer nation, and more than twice as many as some European nations.
A
2024 comparison between the U.S. and peer nations, found that countries
without vaccine mandates had as high immunization rates as the U.S. and
other countries with vaccine mandates.
Trust
in U.S. public health declined from 72% to 40% between 2020 and 2024,
coinciding with public health failure during the pandemic, including
COVID-19 vaccine mandates. Though the COVID-19 vaccine was recommended
for all children on the CDC schedule, the uptake rate was less than 10%
by 2023. The uptake rate of other childhood vaccines declined during the
same time period.
Large
placebo-controlled randomized trials on individual vaccines,
combinations of vaccines, and vaccine schedules, as well as
observational studies, are needed to better inform patients, parents,
and providers and help restore trust in public health.
Immunizations Recommended for All Children
The
CDC will continue to recommend that all children are vaccinated against
diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis (whooping cough), Haemophilus
influenzae type b (Hib), Pneumococcal conjugate, polio, measles, mumps,
rubella, and human papillomavirus (HPV), for which there is
international consensus, as well as varicella (chickenpox).
Recent
scientific studies have shown that one dose of the HPV vaccine is as
effective as two doses. The CDC is following the lead of several peer
nation by recommending one instead of two doses of this vaccine.
The
updated CDC recommended immunizations for all children and adolescents
will maintain robust protection against diseases that cause serious
morbidity or mortality to children.
Immunizations Recommended for Certain High-Risk Groups or Populations
Like
all medical products, vaccines and other immunizing agents have
different risk-benefit profiles for different groups of people. Risk
factors can include unusual exposure to the disease, underlying
comorbidities, or the risk of disease transmission to others.
The
immunizations recommended for certain high-risk groups or populations
are for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), hepatitis A, hepatitis B,
dengue, meningococcal ACWY, and meningococcal B.
Immunizations Based on Shared Clinical Decision-Making
It
is not always possible for public health authorities to clearly define
who will benefit from an immunization, who has the relevant risk
factors, or who is at risk for exposure. Physicians and parents, who
know the child, are then best equipped to decide based on individual
characteristics.
The
immunizations based on shared clinical decision-making are for
rotavirus, COVID-19, influenza, meningococcal disease, hepatitis A, and
hepatitis B.
Insurance Coverage
All
immunizations recommended by the CDC as of December 31, 2025, will
continue to be fully covered by Affordable Care Act insurance plans and
federal insurance programs, including Medicaid, the Children’s Health
Insurance Program, and the Vaccines for Children program. Families will
not have to purchase them out of pocket.
This
means that insurance will continue to cover more vaccines for children
in the U.S. than in peer nations, where insurance generally only pays
for recommended vaccines.
Next Steps
For
health care providers, the CDC will publish the updated Child and
Adolescent Immunization Schedule by Age (through age 18) of immunization
recommendations for all children, immunization recommendations for
certain high-risk groups or populations, and immunizations based on
shared clinical decision-making.
HHS
will work with states and physician groups to educate parents and
providers on the updated CDC childhood immunization schedule.
The CDC will continue to closely monitor vaccine uptake, infectious disease rates and vaccine safety.
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