Washington.- The Donald Trump administration announced on Monday that it will stop mandating four vaccines, those for rotavirus, influenza, meningococcal disease, and hepatitis A, within the childhood immunization schedule in the United States as part of its review of these programs.
These four vaccines will now become optional, and will be administered or not based on the agreed decision made, case by case, by parents and doctors. The announcement comes just a month after the Trump administration asked to reduce the number of vaccines in children's schedules. With this change, which takes effect immediately, and which reduces the recommendation to vaccinate children for 11 diseases instead of the 18 against which they were immunized until now, represents a substantial shift in the United States healthcare system.Why are mandatory vaccinations for children being reduced?
The Department of Health justifies its plan by referencing the Danish system, which has a schedule with fewer vaccines. "This decision protects children, respects families, and restores confidence in public health," said Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in a statement released today.Your statement clashes with the position of doctors and health experts who believe that, without a public debate or a transparent review of the data, the measure puts children at risk.








