Overview
- The AAP schedule restores routine immunization for 18 diseases, reversing the CDC’s Jan. 5 reductions that shifted RSV, hepatitis A and B, rotavirus, influenza and meningococcal vaccines out of universal recommendations.
- Twelve professional organizations, including the American Medical Association, American Academy of Family Physicians and Infectious Diseases Society of America, formally endorsed the AAP guidance.
- At least 28 state health departments have signaled they will follow the AAP recommendations rather than the CDC’s revised schedule, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.
- The AAP keeps COVID-19 vaccination routinely recommended starting at 6 months and retains a two-dose HPV series, diverging from the CDC’s new one-dose HPV approach and conditional categories for several shots.
- The AAP and allied groups have filed suit to block the federal changes, and clinicians warn competing schedules could confuse parents even as insurers continue to cover all recommended vaccines.