January 27, 2026
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Pediatricians Break With CDC, Keep Full Childhood Vaccine Schedule

The American Academy of Pediatrics on Monday released its own childhood and adolescent immunization schedule that explicitly rejects the CDC’s recent decision to scale back routine vaccine recommendations, and instead continues to recommend shots against 18 diseases including RSV, hepatitis A, hepatitis B, rotavirus, influenza and meningococcal disease. AAP President Andrew Racine said the CDC’s new schedule 'departs from longstanding medical evidence' and called those changes 'dangerous and unnecessary,' announcing that the academy will no longer co‑issue a unified schedule with the agency. The CDC’s January update moved several longstanding vaccines into a 'shared clinical decision‑making' category or limited them to high‑risk kids, but a front‑line pediatrician told CBS she and colleagues will 'follow the AAP recommendations' and emphasized that insurance should still cover downgraded shots such as flu and COVID‑19 when parents want them. HHS, which oversees CDC, defended its new schedule as continuing to protect children while 'aligning U.S. guidance with international norms' and promised to work with states and clinicians so families can make 'their own informed decisions,' underscoring a rare, public split between federal health authorities and the nation’s main pediatric society. The clash comes as U.S. childhood vaccination coverage has been slipping and measles has re‑emerged, and is already fueling social‑media arguments over whether CDC is caving to anti‑vaccine pressure or AAP is clinging to an overly aggressive regimen.

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📌 Key Facts

  • AAP’s new schedule recommends immunization against 18 diseases, including RSV, hepatitis A, hepatitis B, rotavirus, influenza and meningococcal disease, versus 11 in the CDC’s January update.
  • AAP President Andrew Racine said the academy would keep issuing vaccine guidance 'rooted in science' and denounced CDC’s revised schedule as 'dangerous and unnecessary' and no longer 'the optimal way to prevent illnesses in children.'
  • HHS defended CDC’s schedule as aligned with 'international norms' and said it will work with states and clinicians to give families clear information for 'informed decisions,' while pediatricians interviewed by CBS say they will follow AAP’s more expansive recommendations and expect insurers to keep covering the full set of shots.

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January 27, 2026