Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 07:19     Subject: Re:R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:There is no need for a Hep B vax for newborns unless the mother is positive. None at all.


+100

A lot of scandanavian countries only vaccinate infants with Hep B based on risk categories.


Really? Which countries in particular?

I’m unclear as to what makes up “a lot” of Scandinavian countries.
Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 07:19     Subject: Re:R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:There is no need for a Hep B vax for newborns unless the mother is positive. None at all.


+100

A lot of scandanavian countries only vaccinate infants with Hep B based on risk categories.


Because the rate of Hep B is much lower in their general populations.

Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 07:09     Subject: R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Now seven pages in, and not one person has explained how giving the vaccine at birth is harmful.


TBH, other than the high-risk newborns, no one is explaining how it is helpful.

It prevents children from dying. That’s how it’s helpful.

Now, will you explain what the harm of the vaccine is?
Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 06:39     Subject: R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is a delicate discussion that deserves a much greater degree of sensitivity than people give it credit for.

There are good reasons for giving the hep B vaccine at birth: hepatitis B can readily be passed from mother to child; the vaccine can likely prevent the overwhelming majority of occasions where a child catches hep B from his or her mother; chronic hep B infections can lead to liver cirrhosis or cancer.

There are also good reasons for not mandating the hep B vaccine at birth across the board: mothers are screened for hep B; some portion of children will have serious side effects from the vaccine; it is widely regarded as medically unethical to administer a medical intervention that is unnecessary, not least because it is a fact of life that most medical interventions have a financial upside to someone somewhere.

The choice ultimately comes down to a subjective value judgment: is it the value of inoculating children whose mothers are hep B positive but received a false negative on the screener greater than the cost of known and unknown vaccine side effects?

What complicates this issue is the asymmetry in harms: if “don’t mandate it” crowd is wrong, you know exactly what harm results—a baby gets hep B. If, however, the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, and some appreciable degree of harm results to some meaningful number of babies from the shot, it’d be really hard to know; you just can’t run a years-long double-blind placebo-controlled study to see how health outcomes differ between people vaccinated at birth against hep B and those who were not. So, if the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, we probably wouldn’t notice it.

On balance, I’m comfortable with the decision not to mandate it. If you’re in a stable, loving marriage with no history of hep B risk factors and if you test negative on the hep B screener, there’s probably a good chance that you’d pass the option up if you weren’t so distracted watching the miracle of life. But I understand why people see it differently.

For those of you whose passions run hot on this issue, I’d urge compassion and kindness.


There is a preprint modeling study on the impact of delaying the vaccine. It is not worth it.

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.11.24.25340907v1.full

The two month delay will result in 90 acute, 75 chronic infections, and 29 deaths, along with 16.4 million in costs.... And that is under perfect adherence at two months which will never happen.

I posted above - I watched my sister die of chronic hepatitis related liver failure acquired in childhood, though Hep C rather than B. It is hell, and even for kids who don't die, the wait for a liver transplant is awful; you have to get very sick to move up on the list, balanced with what happened to my sister as she then got too sick and died before she could get the transplant.

I am pissed at this decision which will cause needless suffering for children with no upside to the delay.


Those numbers are not even significant. (165 infections/3,628,934 live births) equals 0.000045%. Given that the vast majority can be predicted, many can also be avoided. For comparison, there were 3,700 SIDS deaths during 2022. Yet nobody's screaming about a SIDS epidemic. Is it because there's no economic argument (i.e., lifetime cost) because they all died???

Similarly FASD rate is 1 in 1000 live births, yet there's hardly anything said about drunk mothers other than the obvious. I'm sure I could easily think of a dozen more if I was bored enough.

What about Tay-Sachs, sickle cell, cystic fibrosis, hemophilia, etc.? How about Rh blood type incompatibility? All of these cost a lot money and are highly predictive. Where's the outrage for these parents?

Maybe if the government provided all these vaccines for free, after being purchased "below cost" from the drug companies (unlike Covid vaccines where they made out like bandits), they could at least demonstrate how essential and timely they need to be for newborns and infants who live 99% of the time at home. Even asking parents to pay for this (even with insurance), when the chances of acquiring HepB within two months is so low, is ridiculous.

And as for that rushed study because timeliness is more important than fact checking: "This article is a preprint and has not been peer-reviewed [what does this mean?]. It reports new medical research that has yet to be evaluated and so should not be used to guide clinical practice."


It is not about an "epidemic" it is that there is simply no reason to delay the vaccination and lead to increased infections in kids, even if the numbers are small. It is utter stupidity for literally no benefit at the expense of kids' lives and livelihood. A few kids matters to me. Your response ticked me off having watched someone I love die of liver disease acquired in childhood.


There would certainly be outrage for those parents if we had a simple low cost way of preventing those diseases and just decided not to because...*fake reasons*


There's absolutely a good way to prevent many childhood diseases. Genetically test every adult and send parents to jail if procreation causes know predictable diseases. Or is this too intrusive? It'd save a lot of money in medical and educational costs though.

150 kids is not significant enough to not allow a delay of two months because, as has been said ad nauseam, most kids have zero chance predictably to get hepB during that time. Mothers with unknown diagnosis are part of the group still required to get the vaccine.


There was zero reason to delay the dose. None. Nada. Zilch. Zero. Whatever number of childhood infections you think is "significant" enough.


Again you don't answer any questions when presented multiple opportunities. 99+% of kids have zero chance of getting hepB. That's the reason. It'd do more good for the hospital to force parents to breastfeed their kid before allowing discharge from the hospital but, of course, that's parental choice, right?


You are really willing to contort yourself with bizarre solutions to a problem that’s already been solved by a beneficial vaccination.

This reminds me of the anti seatbelt people. WELL WHAT IF THE CAR CATCHES ON FIRE AND YOU ARE TRAPPED! It’s happened once!

Why don’t we just all make cars of marshmallows and give everyone reflex tests and cars can’t go above 5mph and a license should cost $50k and you can ride a bike made of marshmallows…

Like, or you can just wear a seatbelt.


You are literally a delusional Karen. Force everyone to bend to your quasi-religious beliefs over a fraction of a fraction of a decimal of kids. Have that same energy for real problems. Delay is not deny. No need to break, it's not an emergency.
Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 06:31     Subject: R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:Now seven pages in, and not one person has explained how giving the vaccine at birth is harmful.


TBH, other than the high-risk newborns, no one is explaining how it is helpful.

FWIW, under this new recommendation, the opinion of my doctor would have determined whether or not I approved the vaccine for my son (now 5) on the day he was born versus 60 days later.
Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 06:06     Subject: R.I.P. American children

Now seven pages in, and not one person has explained how giving the vaccine at birth is harmful.
Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 05:28     Subject: R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is a delicate discussion that deserves a much greater degree of sensitivity than people give it credit for.

There are good reasons for giving the hep B vaccine at birth: hepatitis B can readily be passed from mother to child; the vaccine can likely prevent the overwhelming majority of occasions where a child catches hep B from his or her mother; chronic hep B infections can lead to liver cirrhosis or cancer.

There are also good reasons for not mandating the hep B vaccine at birth across the board: mothers are screened for hep B; some portion of children will have serious side effects from the vaccine; it is widely regarded as medically unethical to administer a medical intervention that is unnecessary, not least because it is a fact of life that most medical interventions have a financial upside to someone somewhere.

The choice ultimately comes down to a subjective value judgment: is it the value of inoculating children whose mothers are hep B positive but received a false negative on the screener greater than the cost of known and unknown vaccine side effects?

What complicates this issue is the asymmetry in harms: if “don’t mandate it” crowd is wrong, you know exactly what harm results—a baby gets hep B. If, however, the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, and some appreciable degree of harm results to some meaningful number of babies from the shot, it’d be really hard to know; you just can’t run a years-long double-blind placebo-controlled study to see how health outcomes differ between people vaccinated at birth against hep B and those who were not. So, if the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, we probably wouldn’t notice it.

On balance, I’m comfortable with the decision not to mandate it. If you’re in a stable, loving marriage with no history of hep B risk factors and if you test negative on the hep B screener, there’s probably a good chance that you’d pass the option up if you weren’t so distracted watching the miracle of life. But I understand why people see it differently.

For those of you whose passions run hot on this issue, I’d urge compassion and kindness.


There is a preprint modeling study on the impact of delaying the vaccine. It is not worth it.

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.11.24.25340907v1.full

The two month delay will result in 90 acute, 75 chronic infections, and 29 deaths, along with 16.4 million in costs.... And that is under perfect adherence at two months which will never happen.

I posted above - I watched my sister die of chronic hepatitis related liver failure acquired in childhood, though Hep C rather than B. It is hell, and even for kids who don't die, the wait for a liver transplant is awful; you have to get very sick to move up on the list, balanced with what happened to my sister as she then got too sick and died before she could get the transplant.

I am pissed at this decision which will cause needless suffering for children with no upside to the delay.


Those numbers are not even significant. (165 infections/3,628,934 live births) equals 0.000045%. Given that the vast majority can be predicted, many can also be avoided. For comparison, there were 3,700 SIDS deaths during 2022. Yet nobody's screaming about a SIDS epidemic. Is it because there's no economic argument (i.e., lifetime cost) because they all died???

Similarly FASD rate is 1 in 1000 live births, yet there's hardly anything said about drunk mothers other than the obvious. I'm sure I could easily think of a dozen more if I was bored enough.

What about Tay-Sachs, sickle cell, cystic fibrosis, hemophilia, etc.? How about Rh blood type incompatibility? All of these cost a lot money and are highly predictive. Where's the outrage for these parents?

Maybe if the government provided all these vaccines for free, after being purchased "below cost" from the drug companies (unlike Covid vaccines where they made out like bandits), they could at least demonstrate how essential and timely they need to be for newborns and infants who live 99% of the time at home. Even asking parents to pay for this (even with insurance), when the chances of acquiring HepB within two months is so low, is ridiculous.

And as for that rushed study because timeliness is more important than fact checking: "This article is a preprint and has not been peer-reviewed [what does this mean?]. It reports new medical research that has yet to be evaluated and so should not be used to guide clinical practice."


It is not about an "epidemic" it is that there is simply no reason to delay the vaccination and lead to increased infections in kids, even if the numbers are small. It is utter stupidity for literally no benefit at the expense of kids' lives and livelihood. A few kids matters to me. Your response ticked me off having watched someone I love die of liver disease acquired in childhood.


There would certainly be outrage for those parents if we had a simple low cost way of preventing those diseases and just decided not to because...*fake reasons*


There's absolutely a good way to prevent many childhood diseases. Genetically test every adult and send parents to jail if procreation causes know predictable diseases. Or is this too intrusive? It'd save a lot of money in medical and educational costs though.

150 kids is not significant enough to not allow a delay of two months because, as has been said ad nauseam, most kids have zero chance predictably to get hepB during that time. Mothers with unknown diagnosis are part of the group still required to get the vaccine.


There was zero reason to delay the dose. None. Nada. Zilch. Zero. Whatever number of childhood infections you think is "significant" enough.


Again you don't answer any questions when presented multiple opportunities. 99+% of kids have zero chance of getting hepB. That's the reason. It'd do more good for the hospital to force parents to breastfeed their kid before allowing discharge from the hospital but, of course, that's parental choice, right?


You are really willing to contort yourself with bizarre solutions to a problem that’s already been solved by a beneficial vaccination.

This reminds me of the anti seatbelt people. WELL WHAT IF THE CAR CATCHES ON FIRE AND YOU ARE TRAPPED! It’s happened once!

Why don’t we just all make cars of marshmallows and give everyone reflex tests and cars can’t go above 5mph and a license should cost $50k and you can ride a bike made of marshmallows…

Like, or you can just wear a seatbelt.
Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 02:37     Subject: Re:R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:There is no need for a Hep B vax for newborns unless the mother is positive. None at all.


+100

A lot of scandanavian countries only vaccinate infants with Hep B based on risk categories.


That’s not smart at all. Who’s making these decisions on who is high risk? If determination is based on asking mothers about high risk habits they will be using a lot of misinformation.
Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 02:33     Subject: R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:There's no reason why the hep b vax can't be pushed a few months like every other vaccine for the vast majority of people. The odds of contracting it are very low outside of the high risk population.


Hep B is contagious but I find it confusing to how it’s spread it’s so random. One certainty is mothers can spread Hep B to the child during birth. It can be spread through nail clippers and toothbrushes but not through kissing. It can be transmitted by vaginal and anal sex. You can also transmit it through oral sex. The high risk population are needle sharing users and sex without protection.

Why not just keep it there it where it is.
Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 01:21     Subject: R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is a delicate discussion that deserves a much greater degree of sensitivity than people give it credit for.

There are good reasons for giving the hep B vaccine at birth: hepatitis B can readily be passed from mother to child; the vaccine can likely prevent the overwhelming majority of occasions where a child catches hep B from his or her mother; chronic hep B infections can lead to liver cirrhosis or cancer.

There are also good reasons for not mandating the hep B vaccine at birth across the board: mothers are screened for hep B; some portion of children will have serious side effects from the vaccine; it is widely regarded as medically unethical to administer a medical intervention that is unnecessary, not least because it is a fact of life that most medical interventions have a financial upside to someone somewhere.

The choice ultimately comes down to a subjective value judgment: is it the value of inoculating children whose mothers are hep B positive but received a false negative on the screener greater than the cost of known and unknown vaccine side effects?

What complicates this issue is the asymmetry in harms: if “don’t mandate it” crowd is wrong, you know exactly what harm results—a baby gets hep B. If, however, the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, and some appreciable degree of harm results to some meaningful number of babies from the shot, it’d be really hard to know; you just can’t run a years-long double-blind placebo-controlled study to see how health outcomes differ between people vaccinated at birth against hep B and those who were not. So, if the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, we probably wouldn’t notice it.

On balance, I’m comfortable with the decision not to mandate it. If you’re in a stable, loving marriage with no history of hep B risk factors and if you test negative on the hep B screener, there’s probably a good chance that you’d pass the option up if you weren’t so distracted watching the miracle of life. But I understand why people see it differently.

For those of you whose passions run hot on this issue, I’d urge compassion and kindness.


There is a preprint modeling study on the impact of delaying the vaccine. It is not worth it.

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.11.24.25340907v1.full

The two month delay will result in 90 acute, 75 chronic infections, and 29 deaths, along with 16.4 million in costs.... And that is under perfect adherence at two months which will never happen.

I posted above - I watched my sister die of chronic hepatitis related liver failure acquired in childhood, though Hep C rather than B. It is hell, and even for kids who don't die, the wait for a liver transplant is awful; you have to get very sick to move up on the list, balanced with what happened to my sister as she then got too sick and died before she could get the transplant.

I am pissed at this decision which will cause needless suffering for children with no upside to the delay.


Those numbers are not even significant. (165 infections/3,628,934 live births) equals 0.000045%. Given that the vast majority can be predicted, many can also be avoided. For comparison, there were 3,700 SIDS deaths during 2022. Yet nobody's screaming about a SIDS epidemic. Is it because there's no economic argument (i.e., lifetime cost) because they all died???

Similarly FASD rate is 1 in 1000 live births, yet there's hardly anything said about drunk mothers other than the obvious. I'm sure I could easily think of a dozen more if I was bored enough.

What about Tay-Sachs, sickle cell, cystic fibrosis, hemophilia, etc.? How about Rh blood type incompatibility? All of these cost a lot money and are highly predictive. Where's the outrage for these parents?

Maybe if the government provided all these vaccines for free, after being purchased "below cost" from the drug companies (unlike Covid vaccines where they made out like bandits), they could at least demonstrate how essential and timely they need to be for newborns and infants who live 99% of the time at home. Even asking parents to pay for this (even with insurance), when the chances of acquiring HepB within two months is so low, is ridiculous.

And as for that rushed study because timeliness is more important than fact checking: "This article is a preprint and has not been peer-reviewed [what does this mean?]. It reports new medical research that has yet to be evaluated and so should not be used to guide clinical practice."


It is not about an "epidemic" it is that there is simply no reason to delay the vaccination and lead to increased infections in kids, even if the numbers are small. It is utter stupidity for literally no benefit at the expense of kids' lives and livelihood. A few kids matters to me. Your response ticked me off having watched someone I love die of liver disease acquired in childhood.


There would certainly be outrage for those parents if we had a simple low cost way of preventing those diseases and just decided not to because...*fake reasons*


There's absolutely a good way to prevent many childhood diseases. Genetically test every adult and send parents to jail if procreation causes know predictable diseases. Or is this too intrusive? It'd save a lot of money in medical and educational costs though.

150 kids is not significant enough to not allow a delay of two months because, as has been said ad nauseam, most kids have zero chance predictably to get hepB during that time. Mothers with unknown diagnosis are part of the group still required to get the vaccine.


There was zero reason to delay the dose. None. Nada. Zilch. Zero. Whatever number of childhood infections you think is "significant" enough.


Again you don't answer any questions when presented multiple opportunities. 99+% of kids have zero chance of getting hepB. That's the reason. It'd do more good for the hospital to force parents to breastfeed their kid before allowing discharge from the hospital but, of course, that's parental choice, right?


If there is an increase of 30 kids with this devastating disease because of this new policy, that is a tragedy. If we were seeing harm because of the birth dose, that would be one thing, but.... We were not.
Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 01:18     Subject: R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is a delicate discussion that deserves a much greater degree of sensitivity than people give it credit for.

There are good reasons for giving the hep B vaccine at birth: hepatitis B can readily be passed from mother to child; the vaccine can likely prevent the overwhelming majority of occasions where a child catches hep B from his or her mother; chronic hep B infections can lead to liver cirrhosis or cancer.

There are also good reasons for not mandating the hep B vaccine at birth across the board: mothers are screened for hep B; some portion of children will have serious side effects from the vaccine; it is widely regarded as medically unethical to administer a medical intervention that is unnecessary, not least because it is a fact of life that most medical interventions have a financial upside to someone somewhere.

The choice ultimately comes down to a subjective value judgment: is it the value of inoculating children whose mothers are hep B positive but received a false negative on the screener greater than the cost of known and unknown vaccine side effects?

What complicates this issue is the asymmetry in harms: if “don’t mandate it” crowd is wrong, you know exactly what harm results—a baby gets hep B. If, however, the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, and some appreciable degree of harm results to some meaningful number of babies from the shot, it’d be really hard to know; you just can’t run a years-long double-blind placebo-controlled study to see how health outcomes differ between people vaccinated at birth against hep B and those who were not. So, if the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, we probably wouldn’t notice it.

On balance, I’m comfortable with the decision not to mandate it. If you’re in a stable, loving marriage with no history of hep B risk factors and if you test negative on the hep B screener, there’s probably a good chance that you’d pass the option up if you weren’t so distracted watching the miracle of life. But I understand why people see it differently.

For those of you whose passions run hot on this issue, I’d urge compassion and kindness.


There is a preprint modeling study on the impact of delaying the vaccine. It is not worth it.

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.11.24.25340907v1.full

The two month delay will result in 90 acute, 75 chronic infections, and 29 deaths, along with 16.4 million in costs.... And that is under perfect adherence at two months which will never happen.

I posted above - I watched my sister die of chronic hepatitis related liver failure acquired in childhood, though Hep C rather than B. It is hell, and even for kids who don't die, the wait for a liver transplant is awful; you have to get very sick to move up on the list, balanced with what happened to my sister as she then got too sick and died before she could get the transplant.

I am pissed at this decision which will cause needless suffering for children with no upside to the delay.


Those numbers are not even significant. (165 infections/3,628,934 live births) equals 0.000045%. Given that the vast majority can be predicted, many can also be avoided. For comparison, there were 3,700 SIDS deaths during 2022. Yet nobody's screaming about a SIDS epidemic. Is it because there's no economic argument (i.e., lifetime cost) because they all died???

Similarly FASD rate is 1 in 1000 live births, yet there's hardly anything said about drunk mothers other than the obvious. I'm sure I could easily think of a dozen more if I was bored enough.

What about Tay-Sachs, sickle cell, cystic fibrosis, hemophilia, etc.? How about Rh blood type incompatibility? All of these cost a lot money and are highly predictive. Where's the outrage for these parents?

Maybe if the government provided all these vaccines for free, after being purchased "below cost" from the drug companies (unlike Covid vaccines where they made out like bandits), they could at least demonstrate how essential and timely they need to be for newborns and infants who live 99% of the time at home. Even asking parents to pay for this (even with insurance), when the chances of acquiring HepB within two months is so low, is ridiculous.

And as for that rushed study because timeliness is more important than fact checking: "This article is a preprint and has not been peer-reviewed [what does this mean?]. It reports new medical research that has yet to be evaluated and so should not be used to guide clinical practice."


It is not about an "epidemic" it is that there is simply no reason to delay the vaccination and lead to increased infections in kids, even if the numbers are small. It is utter stupidity for literally no benefit at the expense of kids' lives and livelihood. A few kids matters to me. Your response ticked me off having watched someone I love die of liver disease acquired in childhood.


There would certainly be outrage for those parents if we had a simple low cost way of preventing those diseases and just decided not to because...*fake reasons*


There's absolutely a good way to prevent many childhood diseases. Genetically test every adult and send parents to jail if procreation causes know predictable diseases. Or is this too intrusive? It'd save a lot of money in medical and educational costs though.

150 kids is not significant enough to not allow a delay of two months because, as has been said ad nauseam, most kids have zero chance predictably to get hepB during that time. Mothers with unknown diagnosis are part of the group still required to get the vaccine.


There was zero reason to delay the dose. None. Nada. Zilch. Zero. Whatever number of childhood infections you think is "significant" enough.


Again you don't answer any questions when presented multiple opportunities. 99+% of kids have zero chance of getting hepB. That's the reason. It'd do more good for the hospital to force parents to breastfeed their kid before allowing discharge from the hospital but, of course, that's parental choice, right?


Uh no, if you have seen liver disease and watched someone die a slow death from it while desperately hoping for a transplant (I have), breastfeeding vs formula feeding is not the same. Bizarre illogical comparison. Furthermore, birth vaccine is not forced but the current schedule did mean more kids were vaccinated at birth.

What was the reason for delaying the dose recommendation when we currently have a safe, successful program, and delaying the dose inevitably leads to an increase in infections albeit small? Increase in harm, zero benefit. We were not seeing adverse effects of the current program to warrant this change.
Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 01:06     Subject: R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is a delicate discussion that deserves a much greater degree of sensitivity than people give it credit for.

There are good reasons for giving the hep B vaccine at birth: hepatitis B can readily be passed from mother to child; the vaccine can likely prevent the overwhelming majority of occasions where a child catches hep B from his or her mother; chronic hep B infections can lead to liver cirrhosis or cancer.

There are also good reasons for not mandating the hep B vaccine at birth across the board: mothers are screened for hep B; some portion of children will have serious side effects from the vaccine; it is widely regarded as medically unethical to administer a medical intervention that is unnecessary, not least because it is a fact of life that most medical interventions have a financial upside to someone somewhere.

The choice ultimately comes down to a subjective value judgment: is it the value of inoculating children whose mothers are hep B positive but received a false negative on the screener greater than the cost of known and unknown vaccine side effects?

What complicates this issue is the asymmetry in harms: if “don’t mandate it” crowd is wrong, you know exactly what harm results—a baby gets hep B. If, however, the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, and some appreciable degree of harm results to some meaningful number of babies from the shot, it’d be really hard to know; you just can’t run a years-long double-blind placebo-controlled study to see how health outcomes differ between people vaccinated at birth against hep B and those who were not. So, if the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, we probably wouldn’t notice it.

On balance, I’m comfortable with the decision not to mandate it. If you’re in a stable, loving marriage with no history of hep B risk factors and if you test negative on the hep B screener, there’s probably a good chance that you’d pass the option up if you weren’t so distracted watching the miracle of life. But I understand why people see it differently.

For those of you whose passions run hot on this issue, I’d urge compassion and kindness.


There is a preprint modeling study on the impact of delaying the vaccine. It is not worth it.

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.11.24.25340907v1.full

The two month delay will result in 90 acute, 75 chronic infections, and 29 deaths, along with 16.4 million in costs.... And that is under perfect adherence at two months which will never happen.

I posted above - I watched my sister die of chronic hepatitis related liver failure acquired in childhood, though Hep C rather than B. It is hell, and even for kids who don't die, the wait for a liver transplant is awful; you have to get very sick to move up on the list, balanced with what happened to my sister as she then got too sick and died before she could get the transplant.

I am pissed at this decision which will cause needless suffering for children with no upside to the delay.


Those numbers are not even significant. (165 infections/3,628,934 live births) equals 0.000045%. Given that the vast majority can be predicted, many can also be avoided. For comparison, there were 3,700 SIDS deaths during 2022. Yet nobody's screaming about a SIDS epidemic. Is it because there's no economic argument (i.e., lifetime cost) because they all died???

Similarly FASD rate is 1 in 1000 live births, yet there's hardly anything said about drunk mothers other than the obvious. I'm sure I could easily think of a dozen more if I was bored enough.

What about Tay-Sachs, sickle cell, cystic fibrosis, hemophilia, etc.? How about Rh blood type incompatibility? All of these cost a lot money and are highly predictive. Where's the outrage for these parents?

Maybe if the government provided all these vaccines for free, after being purchased "below cost" from the drug companies (unlike Covid vaccines where they made out like bandits), they could at least demonstrate how essential and timely they need to be for newborns and infants who live 99% of the time at home. Even asking parents to pay for this (even with insurance), when the chances of acquiring HepB within two months is so low, is ridiculous.

And as for that rushed study because timeliness is more important than fact checking: "This article is a preprint and has not been peer-reviewed [what does this mean?]. It reports new medical research that has yet to be evaluated and so should not be used to guide clinical practice."


It is not about an "epidemic" it is that there is simply no reason to delay the vaccination and lead to increased infections in kids, even if the numbers are small. It is utter stupidity for literally no benefit at the expense of kids' lives and livelihood. A few kids matters to me. Your response ticked me off having watched someone I love die of liver disease acquired in childhood.


There would certainly be outrage for those parents if we had a simple low cost way of preventing those diseases and just decided not to because...*fake reasons*


There's absolutely a good way to prevent many childhood diseases. Genetically test every adult and send parents to jail if procreation causes know predictable diseases. Or is this too intrusive? It'd save a lot of money in medical and educational costs though.

150 kids is not significant enough to not allow a delay of two months because, as has been said ad nauseam, most kids have zero chance predictably to get hepB during that time. Mothers with unknown diagnosis are part of the group still required to get the vaccine.


There was zero reason to delay the dose. None. Nada. Zilch. Zero. Whatever number of childhood infections you think is "significant" enough.


Again you don't answer any questions when presented multiple opportunities. 99+% of kids have zero chance of getting hepB. That's the reason. It'd do more good for the hospital to force parents to breastfeed their kid before allowing discharge from the hospital but, of course, that's parental choice, right?
Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 00:55     Subject: R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is a delicate discussion that deserves a much greater degree of sensitivity than people give it credit for.

There are good reasons for giving the hep B vaccine at birth: hepatitis B can readily be passed from mother to child; the vaccine can likely prevent the overwhelming majority of occasions where a child catches hep B from his or her mother; chronic hep B infections can lead to liver cirrhosis or cancer.

There are also good reasons for not mandating the hep B vaccine at birth across the board: mothers are screened for hep B; some portion of children will have serious side effects from the vaccine; it is widely regarded as medically unethical to administer a medical intervention that is unnecessary, not least because it is a fact of life that most medical interventions have a financial upside to someone somewhere.

The choice ultimately comes down to a subjective value judgment: is it the value of inoculating children whose mothers are hep B positive but received a false negative on the screener greater than the cost of known and unknown vaccine side effects?

What complicates this issue is the asymmetry in harms: if “don’t mandate it” crowd is wrong, you know exactly what harm results—a baby gets hep B. If, however, the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, and some appreciable degree of harm results to some meaningful number of babies from the shot, it’d be really hard to know; you just can’t run a years-long double-blind placebo-controlled study to see how health outcomes differ between people vaccinated at birth against hep B and those who were not. So, if the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, we probably wouldn’t notice it.

On balance, I’m comfortable with the decision not to mandate it. If you’re in a stable, loving marriage with no history of hep B risk factors and if you test negative on the hep B screener, there’s probably a good chance that you’d pass the option up if you weren’t so distracted watching the miracle of life. But I understand why people see it differently.

For those of you whose passions run hot on this issue, I’d urge compassion and kindness.


There is a preprint modeling study on the impact of delaying the vaccine. It is not worth it.

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.11.24.25340907v1.full

The two month delay will result in 90 acute, 75 chronic infections, and 29 deaths, along with 16.4 million in costs.... And that is under perfect adherence at two months which will never happen.

I posted above - I watched my sister die of chronic hepatitis related liver failure acquired in childhood, though Hep C rather than B. It is hell, and even for kids who don't die, the wait for a liver transplant is awful; you have to get very sick to move up on the list, balanced with what happened to my sister as she then got too sick and died before she could get the transplant.

I am pissed at this decision which will cause needless suffering for children with no upside to the delay.


Those numbers are not even significant. (165 infections/3,628,934 live births) equals 0.000045%. Given that the vast majority can be predicted, many can also be avoided. For comparison, there were 3,700 SIDS deaths during 2022. Yet nobody's screaming about a SIDS epidemic. Is it because there's no economic argument (i.e., lifetime cost) because they all died???

Similarly FASD rate is 1 in 1000 live births, yet there's hardly anything said about drunk mothers other than the obvious. I'm sure I could easily think of a dozen more if I was bored enough.

What about Tay-Sachs, sickle cell, cystic fibrosis, hemophilia, etc.? How about Rh blood type incompatibility? All of these cost a lot money and are highly predictive. Where's the outrage for these parents?

Maybe if the government provided all these vaccines for free, after being purchased "below cost" from the drug companies (unlike Covid vaccines where they made out like bandits), they could at least demonstrate how essential and timely they need to be for newborns and infants who live 99% of the time at home. Even asking parents to pay for this (even with insurance), when the chances of acquiring HepB within two months is so low, is ridiculous.

And as for that rushed study because timeliness is more important than fact checking: "This article is a preprint and has not been peer-reviewed [what does this mean?]. It reports new medical research that has yet to be evaluated and so should not be used to guide clinical practice."


It is not about an "epidemic" it is that there is simply no reason to delay the vaccination and lead to increased infections in kids, even if the numbers are small. It is utter stupidity for literally no benefit at the expense of kids' lives and livelihood. A few kids matters to me. Your response ticked me off having watched someone I love die of liver disease acquired in childhood.


There would certainly be outrage for those parents if we had a simple low cost way of preventing those diseases and just decided not to because...*fake reasons*


There's absolutely a good way to prevent many childhood diseases. Genetically test every adult and send parents to jail if procreation causes know predictable diseases. Or is this too intrusive? It'd save a lot of money in medical and educational costs though.

150 kids is not significant enough to not allow a delay of two months because, as has been said ad nauseam, most kids have zero chance predictably to get hepB during that time. Mothers with unknown diagnosis are part of the group still required to get the vaccine.


There was zero reason to delay the dose. None. Nada. Zilch. Zero. Whatever number of childhood infections you think is "significant" enough.
Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 00:45     Subject: R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is a delicate discussion that deserves a much greater degree of sensitivity than people give it credit for.

There are good reasons for giving the hep B vaccine at birth: hepatitis B can readily be passed from mother to child; the vaccine can likely prevent the overwhelming majority of occasions where a child catches hep B from his or her mother; chronic hep B infections can lead to liver cirrhosis or cancer.

There are also good reasons for not mandating the hep B vaccine at birth across the board: mothers are screened for hep B; some portion of children will have serious side effects from the vaccine; it is widely regarded as medically unethical to administer a medical intervention that is unnecessary, not least because it is a fact of life that most medical interventions have a financial upside to someone somewhere.

The choice ultimately comes down to a subjective value judgment: is it the value of inoculating children whose mothers are hep B positive but received a false negative on the screener greater than the cost of known and unknown vaccine side effects?

What complicates this issue is the asymmetry in harms: if “don’t mandate it” crowd is wrong, you know exactly what harm results—a baby gets hep B. If, however, the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, and some appreciable degree of harm results to some meaningful number of babies from the shot, it’d be really hard to know; you just can’t run a years-long double-blind placebo-controlled study to see how health outcomes differ between people vaccinated at birth against hep B and those who were not. So, if the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, we probably wouldn’t notice it.

On balance, I’m comfortable with the decision not to mandate it. If you’re in a stable, loving marriage with no history of hep B risk factors and if you test negative on the hep B screener, there’s probably a good chance that you’d pass the option up if you weren’t so distracted watching the miracle of life. But I understand why people see it differently.

For those of you whose passions run hot on this issue, I’d urge compassion and kindness.


There is a preprint modeling study on the impact of delaying the vaccine. It is not worth it.

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.11.24.25340907v1.full

The two month delay will result in 90 acute, 75 chronic infections, and 29 deaths, along with 16.4 million in costs.... And that is under perfect adherence at two months which will never happen.

I posted above - I watched my sister die of chronic hepatitis related liver failure acquired in childhood, though Hep C rather than B. It is hell, and even for kids who don't die, the wait for a liver transplant is awful; you have to get very sick to move up on the list, balanced with what happened to my sister as she then got too sick and died before she could get the transplant.

I am pissed at this decision which will cause needless suffering for children with no upside to the delay.


Those numbers are not even significant. (165 infections/3,628,934 live births) equals 0.000045%. Given that the vast majority can be predicted, many can also be avoided. For comparison, there were 3,700 SIDS deaths during 2022. Yet nobody's screaming about a SIDS epidemic. Is it because there's no economic argument (i.e., lifetime cost) because they all died???

Similarly FASD rate is 1 in 1000 live births, yet there's hardly anything said about drunk mothers other than the obvious. I'm sure I could easily think of a dozen more if I was bored enough.

What about Tay-Sachs, sickle cell, cystic fibrosis, hemophilia, etc.? How about Rh blood type incompatibility? All of these cost a lot money and are highly predictive. Where's the outrage for these parents?

Maybe if the government provided all these vaccines for free, after being purchased "below cost" from the drug companies (unlike Covid vaccines where they made out like bandits), they could at least demonstrate how essential and timely they need to be for newborns and infants who live 99% of the time at home. Even asking parents to pay for this (even with insurance), when the chances of acquiring HepB within two months is so low, is ridiculous.

And as for that rushed study because timeliness is more important than fact checking: "This article is a preprint and has not been peer-reviewed [what does this mean?]. It reports new medical research that has yet to be evaluated and so should not be used to guide clinical practice."


It is not about an "epidemic" it is that there is simply no reason to delay the vaccination and lead to increased infections in kids, even if the numbers are small. It is utter stupidity for literally no benefit at the expense of kids' lives and livelihood. A few kids matters to me. Your response ticked me off having watched someone I love die of liver disease acquired in childhood.


There would certainly be outrage for those parents if we had a simple low cost way of preventing those diseases and just decided not to because...*fake reasons*


There's absolutely a good way to prevent many childhood diseases. Genetically test every adult and send parents to jail if procreation causes know predictable diseases. Or is this too intrusive? It'd save a lot of money in medical and educational costs though.

150 kids is not significant enough to not allow a delay of two months because, as has been said ad nauseam, most kids have zero chance predictably to get hepB during that time. Mothers with unknown diagnosis are part of the group still required to get the vaccine.
Anonymous
Post 12/06/2025 00:37     Subject: R.I.P. American children

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is a delicate discussion that deserves a much greater degree of sensitivity than people give it credit for.

There are good reasons for giving the hep B vaccine at birth: hepatitis B can readily be passed from mother to child; the vaccine can likely prevent the overwhelming majority of occasions where a child catches hep B from his or her mother; chronic hep B infections can lead to liver cirrhosis or cancer.

There are also good reasons for not mandating the hep B vaccine at birth across the board: mothers are screened for hep B; some portion of children will have serious side effects from the vaccine; it is widely regarded as medically unethical to administer a medical intervention that is unnecessary, not least because it is a fact of life that most medical interventions have a financial upside to someone somewhere.

The choice ultimately comes down to a subjective value judgment: is it the value of inoculating children whose mothers are hep B positive but received a false negative on the screener greater than the cost of known and unknown vaccine side effects?

What complicates this issue is the asymmetry in harms: if “don’t mandate it” crowd is wrong, you know exactly what harm results—a baby gets hep B. If, however, the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, and some appreciable degree of harm results to some meaningful number of babies from the shot, it’d be really hard to know; you just can’t run a years-long double-blind placebo-controlled study to see how health outcomes differ between people vaccinated at birth against hep B and those who were not. So, if the “let’s mandate it” crowd is wrong, we probably wouldn’t notice it.

On balance, I’m comfortable with the decision not to mandate it. If you’re in a stable, loving marriage with no history of hep B risk factors and if you test negative on the hep B screener, there’s probably a good chance that you’d pass the option up if you weren’t so distracted watching the miracle of life. But I understand why people see it differently.

For those of you whose passions run hot on this issue, I’d urge compassion and kindness.


There is a preprint modeling study on the impact of delaying the vaccine. It is not worth it.

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.11.24.25340907v1.full

The two month delay will result in 90 acute, 75 chronic infections, and 29 deaths, along with 16.4 million in costs.... And that is under perfect adherence at two months which will never happen.

I posted above - I watched my sister die of chronic hepatitis related liver failure acquired in childhood, though Hep C rather than B. It is hell, and even for kids who don't die, the wait for a liver transplant is awful; you have to get very sick to move up on the list, balanced with what happened to my sister as she then got too sick and died before she could get the transplant.

I am pissed at this decision which will cause needless suffering for children with no upside to the delay.


Those numbers are not even significant. (165 infections/3,628,934 live births) equals 0.000045%. Given that the vast majority can be predicted, many can also be avoided. For comparison, there were 3,700 SIDS deaths during 2022. Yet nobody's screaming about a SIDS epidemic. Is it because there's no economic argument (i.e., lifetime cost) because they all died???

Similarly FASD rate is 1 in 1000 live births, yet there's hardly anything said about drunk mothers other than the obvious. I'm sure I could easily think of a dozen more if I was bored enough.

What about Tay-Sachs, sickle cell, cystic fibrosis, hemophilia, etc.? How about Rh blood type incompatibility? All of these cost a lot money and are highly predictive. Where's the outrage for these parents?

Maybe if the government provided all these vaccines for free, after being purchased "below cost" from the drug companies (unlike Covid vaccines where they made out like bandits), they could at least demonstrate how essential and timely they need to be for newborns and infants who live 99% of the time at home. Even asking parents to pay for this (even with insurance), when the chances of acquiring HepB within two months is so low, is ridiculous.

And as for that rushed study because timeliness is more important than fact checking: "This article is a preprint and has not been peer-reviewed [what does this mean?]. It reports new medical research that has yet to be evaluated and so should not be used to guide clinical practice."


"Under the current standard of care (universal hepatitis B birth dose), we project 625 perinatal HBV infections annually.5 Eliminating the birth dose for infants of HBsAg-negative mothers—as proposed—would raise the number of cases to 674, an 8% increase (Figure, red circle). Restricting the birth dose only to infants born to HBsAg-positive mothers would raise perinatal HBV cases to 1101—an additional 63%, or a 76% increase from current (Figure, red box). Our projected transmissions are higher than those reported to the CDC, figures known to underestimate the true burden of disease due to underreporting, undiagnosed infections, and possible model bias.5,10 Still, the model is useful for assessing how changes to birth dose recommendations affect expected perinatal transmission. The model likely underestimates the increase that would follow abandonment of universal birth dose policy because it does not account for rising vaccine hesitancy, the birth dose’s protection against postnatal HBV transmission in infancy, or reduced adherence when the first dose is delayed until 1 month of age"

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2842435

Every preventable child disease is a tragedy, especially when we change existing successful policy for...*checks notes* ... No good reason whatsoever.