hepatitis B, Trump
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Do babies really need the hepatitis B vaccine? What we know as RFK Jr. moves to delay shots for kids
Over 296 million people are living with chronic hepatitis B, making it the most common liver infection in the world.
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices decided to push the hepatitis B vote to the Sept. 19 session due to a "discrepancy" in voting language. During Friday's session, the committee is also slated to discuss and vote on COVID-19 vaccines.
A meeting of advisers chosen by US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to guide US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention vaccine recommendations ended abruptly Thursday with a delayed vote on one vaccine,
A group of advisers for the CDC voted to narrow existing recommendations for the combined MMRV shot that protects against measles, mumps, rubella and chickenpox.
Rough Draft Atlanta on MSN
CDC vaccine panel votes to limit use of a childhood vaccine as COVID, hepatitis B decisions loom
A key vaccine advisory panel at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention voted to change its recommendations around certain childhood immunizations Thursday, despite the CDC’s own data showing that the vaccines are safe and effective.
Delaying the hepatitis vaccine for newborns would have serious and possibly fatal consequences, writes A.J. Russo.
On top of this Trump also made the claim that hepatitis B is a sexually transmitted disease, which has caused more bewilderment. During the conference, the Republican leader suggested there's no need for a hepatitis B vaccine for babies and children should instead get it when they are much older.
President Trump on Monday gave personal suggestions on how and when parents should have children receive certain vaccines, offering advice that he said was based on his own feelings during a press event that claimed links between Tylenol,