We literally did a risk based approach like this and it FAILED! |
Oh, are doing everything the Scandinavians do now? When is MAHA giving us universal healthcare? |
Show the data on virus transmission rate among newborns with a "clean" mother. Your "it doesn't cause harm" argument is a slippery slope. Maybe it doesn't. But this argument is never valid. Also, there is a financial cost and someone's making a boatload of money. The "it's good for public health" argument is also specious. Ban alcohol (or at the least, advertising) to save livers then. It'd do way more good than a forced vaccine at birth, which can be given at a later date. |
| Does it mean that people can’t get the vaccine for their healthy newborns? Or is it just the recommendation that’s being lifted? |
| It seems people have forgotten why these vaccines were developed in the first place. 3 kids have already died of pertussis this year in KY and vaccine rates will keep plummeting in the years to come. |
The timing is for convenience, not medical necessity. |
What is the harm of giving it earlier? |
So now you like Scandinavia? Thought you MAGAs derided them as socialist havens. |
There isn't any. Only benefit. We used to vaccinate only children of known Hep B positive mothers and the approach failed until we went with vaccination at birth. Hep B is more infectious than Hep C or HIV and tiny amounts of it are viable on surfaces for at least a week. This is why dialysis facilities have extra prevention measures specifically for Hep B patients. The 2nd most common way children acquire Hep B is a household contact. |
Such ignorance. The high risk populations are also less likely to get prenatal care, so a Hep B infection of the mother may not be picked up. And I guess the infants of high risk parents don't deserve to be protected? Do we not care if they end up sick and with early liver cancer? Even if you don't care (I do), perhaps you might care if you think that these kids are also more likely to be on Medicaid, so if they end up with Hep B due to transmission at birth, they will cost the taxpayers more $. |
| I will pay out of pocket, sign whatever for my upcoming kid to have whatever is recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics and not RFK Jr's. Conspiracy squad. |
Cannot get vaccinated unless in risk group: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/dec/05/cdc-panel-rfk-hepatitis-b-vaccine |
Yes, it means it may be impossible now get the vax for newborns. |
Anything the state health boards can do? This is ridiculous. |
Doesn't matter, it may be too legally tenuous to give out the vax to newborns now eveif parents want to pay out of pocket. US kids are fuuuuuuuuuuuucked. Hep b is like 100x more contagious than HIV. Maybe risk is lower if mothers are clean, but this idiotic argument assumes every mother has adequate prenatal care and gets tested. Newsflash: in the real world that never happens. Hep B explodes once inside a newborns body when they have a weak and developing immune system. It only takes a very small amount of viral exposure. Have fun bringing a new born out in public soon, American parents..... |