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Home » US CDC accepts advisers’ recommendations for hepatitis B vaccine in major policy shift
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US CDC accepts advisers’ recommendations for hepatitis B vaccine in major policy shift

IQ TIMES MEDIABy IQ TIMES MEDIADecember 16, 2025No Comments1 Min Read
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Dec 16 (Reuters) – The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on ​Tuesday adopted its advisers’ recommendation allowing ‌parents, in consultation with a healthcare provider, to ‌decide whether infants born to hepatitis B-negative mothers should get the vaccine, including the birth dose, ending the long-standing policy ⁠that all ‌U.S. newborns receive it.

For those infants not receiving the birth dose, ‍the agency now recommends that the initial dose be administered no earlier than two months ​of age.

An advisory panel appointed by ‌Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., earlier this month, recommended that a birth dose should only be given to newborns whose mothers test positive for hepatitis ⁠B or whose status ​is unknown.

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While experts warn ​the new recommendation could expose more children to the harmful virus, ‍it marks ⁠a major policy win for Kennedy, a longtime anti-vaccine activist, who has ⁠made far-reaching changes to the U.S. vaccination policy.

(Reporting ‌by Mariam Sunny in Bengaluru; Editing ‌by Alan Barona)



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