Here are two articles with the details
From CIDRAP - Center for Infectious Disease Research & Policy, University of Minnesota
When confusion replaces clarity about vaccines, children
pay the price
Michael T. Osterholm, PhD, MPH and Sarah Despres
When the US government changes long-standing childhood vaccine recommendations, parents deserve clarity: what changed, why it changed, and what it means for their children’s health. Instead, the recent revamp of the US childhood immunization schedule was announced abruptly by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) with limited explanation and evidence, and little transparency about how decisions were reached or how they are expected to improve health outcomes.![]() |
| Who needs science? |
Much of the public commentary since the announcement has
focused on the remaining policy levers available to HHS to reduce access to
vaccines, such as changes to insurance coverage, liability protections, or
federal programs for under- and uninsured children. Those concerns are real.
But they obscure a more immediate and troubling reality: vaccine uptake is declining,
not because access has disappeared, but because vaccination itself is being
steadily de-normalized through uncertainty, mixed messages, and the spread of
inaccurate information coming from the political appointees at HHS.
HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. achieved his intended goal. He created even more confusion about and distrust in the use of vaccines.









