logo
Covid-19 shots for healthy children remain on CDC vaccine schedule despite Kennedy's pledge to remove them

Covid-19 shots for healthy children remain on CDC vaccine schedule despite Kennedy's pledge to remove them

Yahoo3 days ago

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has updated its immunization schedule for children after US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s announcement this week that Covid-19 vaccines would be removed from the list of recommended shots for healthy children and pregnant women. However, the vaccines remain on the schedule for kids, although with a slightly different designation.
Instead of being listed as 'recommended' by the CDC, they are now listed as 'recommended vaccination based on shared clinical decision-making,' meaning healthy children – those who don't have an underlying condition that raises their risk of severe illness – can get the shots after consulting with a health care provider.
According to the CDC, such a provider would be anyone who routinely administers vaccines, including doctors, nurse practitioners, nurses and pharmacists.
A vaccine listed on the schedule in this category is required to be covered by insurance with no cost-sharing, meaning no co-pays for patients, according to the CDC.
Many of the agency's information pages continue to recommend the Covid-19 vaccine for pregnant women, but the adult immunization schedule has been changed to specify that the recommendation applies only to adults who aren't pregnant.
'The old COVID-19 vaccine recommendations for healthy children under 18 and for pregnant women have been removed from the CDC vaccine schedule,' HHS press officer Emily Hilliard said in a statement Friday.
'The CDC and HHS encourage individuals to talk with their healthcare provider about any personal medical decision. Under the leadership of Secretary Kennedy, HHS is restoring the doctor-patient relationship. If a parent desires their healthy child to be vaccinated, their decision should be based on informed consent through the clinical [judgment] of their healthcare provider,' the statement said.
The change to the vaccine schedule comes days after Kennedy posted a video on social media saying it had happened.
'As of today, the Covid vaccine for healthy children and healthy pregnant women has been removed from the CDC recommended immunization schedule,' Kennedy said in the video Tuesday, standing beside FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary and National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya. 'Last year, the Biden administration urged healthy children to get yet another Covid shot, despite the lack of any clinical data to support the repeat booster strategy in children.'
The announcement was met with dismay from parents and pediatricians who feared that kids and pregnant women might lose insurance coverage for the vaccines.
'It's been a bit disheartening, to be honest,' said Fatima Ka, co-founder of the nonprofit grassroots group Protect Their Future, which advocated for kids' access to Covid-19 vaccines throughout the pandemic.
'A lot of parents right now have been doing everything they can. They've been calling their representatives, their health departments, anyone who will listen, anyone who is accountable to the public. And it just felt like today we were heard even if it was in a small way,' Ka told CNN.
Kids can become severely ill with Covid-19, especially if they're younger than 5. Data presented at the last meeting of the CDC's independent vaccine advisers showed that children 4 and under were hospitalized with Covid at roughly the same rate over the past two respiratory seasons as they were with the flu, and it was a severe influenza season. Fewer than 5% of children hospitalized with Covid-19 last season were up to date on their Covid-19 vaccinations.
Dr. Susan Kressly, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said the updated recommendation – which preserves insurance coverage for the vaccines – was a relief.
'After confusing, mixed messages from leaders at Health and Human Services (HHS) earlier this week, we are relieved to see today that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) updated its schedules for child and adolescent immunizations to allow families to maintain the choice to immunize their children against Covid in consultation with their doctor,' Kressly said in a statement.
'However, the deeply flawed process to reach the recommendation raises serious concerns about the stability of the nation's immunization infrastructure and commitment by federal leaders to make sure families can access critical immunizations, whether for Covid or other infectious diseases,' she added.
Pregnancy is a risk factor for severe Covid-19 infections. Early in the pandemic, CDC studies found that pregnant women with Covid were three times more likely to need ICU care and nearly twice as likely to die compared with those who weren't pregnant. Covid infections during pregnancy have also been linked to fetal complications such as stillbirth and preterm delivery.
The Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine said it would continue to recommend that people who are pregnant be vaccinated against Covid-19.
'Maternal immunization remains the best way to reduce maternal, fetal, and infant complications from COVID-19 infection, and is safe to be given at any point during pregnancy. Maternal immunization is also associated with improved infant outcomes and decreased complications, including maternal and infant hospitalizations,' the group said in a statement.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

RFK Jr. fires ‘opening salvo' on vaccine status quo
RFK Jr. fires ‘opening salvo' on vaccine status quo

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

RFK Jr. fires ‘opening salvo' on vaccine status quo

Public health experts say Robert F. Kennedy Jr is exactly who they thought he was. The Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary — who is also the nation's most well-known vaccine skeptic — is remaking the agency in his image, casting doubt on the benefits of vaccines, and erecting new barriers that will make it harder for people who want shots to get them, like requiring new vaccines to be tested against placebos. During his confirmation hearings and other recent congressional testimony, Kennedy sought to distance himself from the anti-vaccine movement. He argued he is simply seeking good data about vaccine safety. He assured lawmakers he would not take away anyone's vaccines and specifically pledged to Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) that he would not make any changes to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) vaccine advisory panel. While testifying at a House Appropriations Committee hearing on May 14, Kennedy said his views on vaccines were 'irrelevant.' 'I don't want to seem like I'm being evasive, but I don't think people should be taking medical advice from me,' he told lawmakers, after being asked whether he would vaccinate his own children today against measles. Yet in the past week, Kennedy made an end run around the traditional process to change the recommendations about who should get a COVID-19 vaccine. He threatened to bar government scientists from publishing in leading medical journals, and his office revoked hundreds of millions of dollars pledged to mRNA vaccine maker Moderna to develop, test and purchase shots for pandemic flu. Kennedy has been critical of mRNA vaccines, and HHS said the funding was canceled because of concerns about the safety of 'under-tested' mRNA technology. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association, said the public should take Kennedy at his word. 'He's right. We shouldn't trust him,' Benjamin said. 'He's unbridled. He's out of control, and so I am fearful that he will do more to undermine vaccine access and quality in the United States.' Kennedy has a long history of opposition to vaccines. He petitioned the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2021 to revoke the emergency use authorizations of the COVID-19 vaccines and threatened to sue the agency if it authorized COVID vaccines for children. His latest moves to change the COVID vaccine recommendations on healthy children and pregnant women are raising serious concerns about the potential to pull back on even more vaccines. 'What I see is COVID has provided this natural starting point … to sort of have that opening salvo in a bigger, longer-term effort to reconstruct, undermine vaccine policy,' said Richard Hughes IV, an attorney at Epstein Becker Green and former vice president of public policy at Moderna. The decision to change COVID vaccine policy was announced in a 58-second video clip shared on the social media site X. 'I couldn't be more pleased to announce that as of today the COVID vaccine for healthy children and healthy pregnant women has been removed from the CDC-recommended immunization schedule,' Kennedy said. Days after Kennedy's pronouncement, the CDC issued new guidance that removed the recommendation for pregnant women to get a COVID shot but kept the vaccine on the childhood immunization schedule. The agency changed the recommendation from its previous wording of 'should' to say healthy children 'may' get the COVID vaccine after consulting with a health provider, an apparent contradiction to Kennedy's plan. Despite the new wording, the changes buck the traditional method of making new vaccine recommendations. The FDA decides whether to approve or authorize a vaccine, and the CDC's independent vaccine advisory panel convenes in an open public meeting to decide questions like who should get it, when and how often. It then sends recommendations to the CDC director, who can endorse or reject the recommendations. The director nearly always defers to the panel. The HHS secretary isn't typically involved in vaccine decisions, but there currently isn't an acting CDC director. 'We're seeing a total side-stepping of the nation's leading public health agency,' said Richard Besser, a former acting director of the CDC and president of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Besser said doctors rely on the recommendations of federal health experts, which are supposed to be based on the best available science and evidence. But doctors can't be assured that's the case anymore, he said. Both Hughes and Benjamin said other changes to HHS vaccine policy are likely to be more nuanced and subtle than the agency's actions on COVID. 'I would have said a couple months ago, obviously measles, obviously polio, those are childhood vaccines [that could be changed]. … But I think it's going to be a little more subtle [than banning a shot]. It's going to be a little more slow,' Hughes said. In April, the CDC's vaccine advisers met after a two-month delay to vote on recommendations for chikungunya vaccines, meningitis vaccines and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccines. About a month later, Kennedy personally signed off on recommendations for the chikungunya shot. He has not acted on the other recommendations from the panel's April meeting, including the use of a new meningitis vaccine and an expansion of RSV vaccines to high-risk adults ages 50-59. The vaccine panel isn't scheduled to vote on COVID vaccine recommendations until late June. Experts said it'll be important to listen to what the panel members say, and whether they feel they have the freedom to discuss HHS's recent actions. 'You've got a committee of advisers who were cut out of the loop. How are they going to handle that in a public forum?' Benjamin said. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Kennedy's autism crusade ignores history, including his own family's
Kennedy's autism crusade ignores history, including his own family's

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Kennedy's autism crusade ignores history, including his own family's

In the telling of President Trump and his Health and Human Services secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., autism in the U.S. has exploded in the past decades with seemingly no explanation. These claims skip over a mountain of data and touch on the country's dark history around treating people with neurological and developmental differences, including within Kennedy's own illustrious family. 'We are indeed diagnosing autism more than ever before in history. I mean, that's just a fact,' Andy Shih, chief science officer at the nonprofit Autism Speaks, told The Hill. While Kennedy insists external factors like vaccines must be to blame, experts instead believe the trend is a reflection of an improved understanding of neurodivergence within the medical community. 'We think that the increases are due to the fact that there's greater awareness that there are tools now that allow us to screen systematically with children at certain ages, certain stages of development,' Shih said. Autism, like many diagnoses, does not exist in a vacuum. Its perception and detection have changed drastically within the last century, with much of that change occurring throughout Kennedy's lifetime. The exact cause of autism is unknown, but the current scientific consensus is that it's a complex amalgamation of genetic predispositions and environmental factors. 'We used to compare autism to what we call complex disorders or complex diseases like heart disease and lung disease, where there's certainly a genetic predisposition, but environment influences certainly affect outcome,' Shih said. 'Now we look at autism not as a medical condition, but part of the richness of human variation.' Kennedy vowed to find the cause of autism by September of this year, suggesting that 'environmental toxins' in food and medicine are the likely culprits. Since autism was first diagnosed, numerous causes have been suggested, several of which have been discredited. In the mid-20th century, Austrian American psychologist Bruno Bettelheim proposed that emotionally distant parenting by so-called refrigerator mothers was the cause of autism, and he called for removing diagnosed children from their parents. Kennedy has long put his support behind the theory that vaccines could cause autism, but analyses, including those conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), have found no link between immunizations and autism spectrum disorder. Kennedy's stated goal for finding the cause of autism is to prevent it from occurring. During an April press conference, he said children with autism will go on to be burdens on their families and society. 'These are kids who will never pay taxes, they'll never hold a job, they'll never play baseball, they'll never write a poem, they'll never go out on a date. Many of them will never use a toilet unassisted,' Kennedy said. 'Autism destroys families,' he added. As to whether autism can be prevented, it's unclear. And some experts question the necessity, and ethics, of such an endeavor. 'Is it environmental exposure? Is it maternal or paternal age? We don't know the answers to that,' said Nicole Clark, CEO and co-founder of the Adult and Pediatric Institute. 'We absolutely should be funding scientific research to try to get to the bottom of that. But the comments that he makes of 'we should prevent autism.' Those comments get very close to eugenics.' Clark is also the mother of children with autism. 'Those comments start to weed into anyone that is different should be prevented,' she added. According to the CDC, 1 in 31 children and 1 in 45 adults in the U.S. have autism. This is a stark difference from just a few decades ago, when roughly 1 in 150 children were diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. But autism as a diagnosis is a historically recent development. The first person considered to be diagnosed with autism, an American banker named Donald Triplett, died in 2023 at the age of 89. He was diagnosed in 1943, 11 years before Kennedy was born. Autism was first added to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) as a psychiatric disorder connected to schizophrenia in 1968. It wasn't until 1980 that the DSM was updated to reflect autism as a developmental diagnosis separate from schizophrenia. The standards and criteria for diagnosing autism have also broadened over the years. But increased diagnoses don't necessarily mean increased occurrence. 'We can see a couple things that indicate that what's going on is that our ability to recognize and diagnose autism is improving, rather than that the actual rate of autism occurring in the population is going up,' said Zoe Gross, director of advocacy at Autistic Self Advocacy Network. Diagnosis substitution is a phenomenon in which the labeling of one condition is replaced by another over time as knowledge and understanding change. Applying our current day understanding of autism spectrum disorder reveals broad areas for potential diagnosis substitution. 'We see that as we learn more about autism, people who clearly show the traits of autism but would in the past have been given just a diagnosis of intellectual disability, now have an autism diagnosis,' Gross explains. Another factor contributing to increased diagnoses is that many people with autism spectrum disorder may appear to have no intellectual disability. 'Rates of autism without intellectual disability, that is increasing faster than diagnoses of autism with intellectual disability, which shows that if that group that would have been missed in the past that is making up the larger portion of the increase in diagnoses,' said Gross. A report from 2023 that reviewed information from 2000 to 2016 found that 26.7 percent of children with autism spectrum disorder had profound autism. But there is nuance within that group, too. 'When they did that study, they defined profound autism as having a measured IQ below 50, or being nonspeaking, or being mostly nonspeaking. So, any of those three things, or any combination of those three things, you would get put in that category,' said Gross. Despite being lumped together, many people with autism spectrum disorder who are nonverbal or mostly nonverbal are capable of productive activities, which Gross notes can include writing poetry. Gross noted that when Kennedy was growing up, 'the diagnosis of autism wasn't even in the DSM.' According to Gross, to be diagnosed with autism in the '40s and '50s, when Kennedy was growing up, was 'very rare,' as only a few clinicians would have been able to identify it. Kennedy has claimed that he's never seen someone of his generation with 'full-blown autism,' which could be partly explained by how many of these individuals were hidden away from wider society. Up until the mid-20th century, a large proportion of children perceived to be mentally or neurologically disabled were put in institutions where they were often subjected to extreme neglect. Institutionalization reached its peak in the '50s and '60s. 'If you look at statistics about the disabilities and needs of people who are in institutions around the time when they started to close in the '60s and '70s, you'll see that many of those people had exactly those kinds of disabilities and needs that Secretary Kennedy describes,' said Gross. 'Families would be told … 'You should forget all about them, try to have another child and move on with your life,'' Gross added. 'So, a very kind of coldhearted approach to society's responsibility to care for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.' Beginning in the '60s, parents began moving away from institutionalization, choosing instead to keep their children at home. The Kennedys were early adopters of this choice, at least in the beginning. Rosemary Kennedy, born in 1918, was the eldest daughter of Joseph and Rose Kennedy and aunt to the current Health secretary. Developmental delays were observed early on in Rosemary's life; she was slower to walk and speak than her brothers and had difficulty concentrating. She is also remembered as having had a bright personality in her youth. It's unclear if Rosemary had autism or another developmental disorder. But with these traits, the Kennedys would have been advised to institutionalize Rosemary. 'But Rose Kennedy, their mother and that would be Bobby Kennedy Jr.'s grandmother, didn't believe in that, and she thought the best place for Rosemary was at home,' historian Kate Clifford Larson, author of the book 'Rosemary: The Hidden Kennedy Daughter,' told The Hill. 'So, they diverged from what was going on in general in the public at the time.' Joe Kennedy, who Larson describes as 'nervous and afraid,' consented to having Rosemary lobotomized in her early 20s, rendering her incapacitated and institutionalized for the rest of her life. She died in 2005. According to Larson, this choice to raise Rosemary along with her other siblings, and her subsequent disappearance from their lives, had a profound impact on the entire family, including RFK Jr.'s father, the senior Robert F. Kennedy. 'He was 14, 13 when she was lobotomized, so he was cognizant, whereas Ted was a little bit younger. So, they were all affected, and they missed her, because it was a very, very tight family,' said Larson. 'Bobby missed her, too, and like his brother, Jack, once they got power in the government, they started making changes.' Rosemary's sister Eunice Kennedy Shriver went on to found the Special Olympics, the largest sports organization for children and adults with intellectual disabilities. Eunice's son, Anthony Shriver, founded the group Best Buddies International, which connects people with intellectual and developmental disabilities with friends and mentors. 'Bobby Jr., he was part of that. He saw his family do all these things all those years,' said Larson. 'He visited those horrific institutions as a teenager and young man. He saw how horrible they were. And so, for him today to say that those things didn't exist, that autism and these other illnesses did not exist before vaccines, is crazy.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

90s comedy icon Jamie Kennedy says social media, podcasts have been ‘incredible' for ‘authentic' comedy
90s comedy icon Jamie Kennedy says social media, podcasts have been ‘incredible' for ‘authentic' comedy

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

90s comedy icon Jamie Kennedy says social media, podcasts have been ‘incredible' for ‘authentic' comedy

Veteran stand-up comedian and actor Jamie Kennedy believes social media and podcasting has been "incredible" for the comedy industry. The "Malibu's Most Wanted" star and "The Jamie Kennedy Experiment" creator spoke to Fox News Digital this month about how the comedy landscape has changed since he rose to fame in the 90s. According to the entertainer, the rise of social media and podcasting has made it so much more possible for people to hear "authentic" voices. "You know, comedy and podcasting seem to go very hand in hand… people are very good at it and they, they tell their authentic stories and their authentic point of view," he said. 'Last Call' Star Jamie Kennedy Talks Cancel Culture: 'There's No Forgiveness Anymore' Kennedy, 55, has made his mark in many entertainment media spaces over the years. He has starred in major Hollywood franchises like "Scream," written and produced TV shows, has toured the world doing stand-up comedy, and, more recently, embraced podcasting. The comedian now hosts his "HATE TO BREAK IT TO YA with Jamie Kennedy" podcast, which can be found on Spotify and other major audio platforms. "I mean, I talk about everything," he said, adding that he's not afraid to discuss taboo subjects and explore unpopular political opinions. Read On The Fox News App "I think I probably go down a rabbit hole on some topics of things that – I don't like to use the word 'conspiracy.' I think it's like a curse word. You know the saying, 'I need new conspiracies cause all the other ones came true?' I talk about stuff like that and it's just – more and more I'm talking about stuff." The comedian explained how he has seen the podcast medium take off just in the way it has brought more fringe conversations about politics and other topics to the mainstream. Hollywood Stars 'Afraid Of The Backlash' If They Side With Israel Over Palestinians, Jewish Critic Says "I really find it's [reaching] critical mass, or we've permeated something, because people are talking about stuff that were relegated to the dark corners of the web much more openly now," he said. "You go to Chili's and the waitress will say something, and you're like, 'Whoa!'" Kennedy said this more open and authentic discourse is what makes the current era of social media and podcast dominance worth it, despite any negative aspects. "I believe all of the social media is very good," he said. "I mean, there's obviously problems with it and, you know, people living fake lives and depression. It's true, but and in terms of communication peer-to-peer, I trust social media a lot more than I do mainstream stuff." By mainstream stuff, the comic clarified he was talking about traditional and legacy media outlets. He told Fox News Digital he believes the prevalence of podcasts and new tech is why people left traditional media in droves last year. "You know, in the 2024 election, we saw a lot of people kind of going off of CNN or New York Times, like not going to them as much. And instead, we saw podcasts become like this huge outlet for like people to get information because they weren't trusting what they saw in the mainstream media." Comedian Nate Bargatze Says Disney Has Abandoned Its Audience As He Talks About Building Rival Media Empire In Kennedy's opinion, this media migration was enough to get President Donald Trump elected to a second term. "Podcasters to me, 100%, got the president elected. Like literally, I can name ten podcasts he was on, and it's like, a 100%." "And what a way to do it," he continued. "You know, get yourself out there in the most – we already have an unfiltered man in the White House, but you know, he's going to be even more unfiltered." Prominent podcast hosts, like Joe Rogan and comedian Theo Von, have been widely credited with helping Trump win the 2024 presidential race after having him on their shows in the lead up to the election. Click Here For More Coverage Of Media And Culture Kennedy went on to mention how this new media landscape can also really boost comedians' careers, noting how it can allow anyone to go viral and connect with audiences who are always craving new and more authentic voices. "It's incredible," he said. "People find an audience for what they like. So, there are people that go to a – I'll go to a club and I'll sell pretty good on the weekend, which is the prime spot. And then Monday and Tuesday, there'll be somebody that I've never heard of, that didn't really break through the mainstream, and they'll sell out a couple shows on a Monday or a Tuesday, which is incredibly hard." "So yeah, I mean, if you have a voice and you have people that are like-minded and they find you, it's perfect. It has cluttered the market a lot, because we're all fighting for the eyeballs. But I mean, it's very democratized," he article source: 90s comedy icon Jamie Kennedy says social media, podcasts have been 'incredible' for 'authentic' comedy

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store