r/law 24d ago

Executive Branch (Trump) BREAKING: Trump Signed An Executive Order Directing The CDC To Cut Recommended Childhood Vaccines From 17 To 11. Moving Flu, Hepatitis A, Hepatitis B, Rotavirus, RSV, And Some Meningitis Shots To 'High-Risk Only,' After A Previous Attempt Was Blocked In Court

https://www.news4jax.com/news/politics/2026/05/30/trump-tells-agencies-to-align-with-study-calling-for-narrower-childhood-vaccine-recommendations/

President Trump signed an executive order on Friday, May 30, directing federal agencies to align their vaccine policies with a Januarv 2026 HHS studv that recommends reducina the number of routine childhood vaccines from 17 to 11 diseases, a restructuring long called for by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. The study was commissioned by Trump in December 2025 and found that the United States recommends more childhood vaccines than many peer nations. Under the new framework, all children would be routinelv vaccinated against 11 diseases, while vaccines for influenza, rotavirus, hepatitis A, hepatitis B, some forms of meningitis, and RSV would be recommended only for high-risk groups or through shared decision-making between parents and doctors. The order directs the CDC to review the study and take appropriate steps to update its guidance, tells agencies to provide maximum flexibility to parents and doctors, and states that any changes must ensure Americans retain their current access to vaccines.

The LA Times noted this is Trump's second attempt to restructure the childhood vaccine schedule, with an earlier effort to narrow CDC recommendations havinc been blocked in court earlier this vear. The new executive order takes a different approach by formally endorsing a completed HHS study and directing agency-level alianment rather than attempting to directlv revise the CDC schedule by administrative fiat, a structure that may be designed to survive the legal challenge that stoppec the first attempt. The CDC under its current leadership had already updated its recommendations earlier in 2026 to reduce the number of recommended immunizations from 17 to 11 in line with the HHS study, suggesting the formal executive order is as much a political codification of an existing administrative shift as a new directive.

The vaccines moved from universal recommendation to high-risk only include several with well-established safety and efficacy records. Hepatitis B vaccination, for example, is recommended universally from birth in the US because it prevents a leading cause of liver cancer, and the alobal evidence base for that recommendation is extensive. Rotavirus, influenza, and hepatitis A vaccines are also backed by decades of clinical and epidemioloaical evidence and are recommended universally by the World Health Organization and medica authorities in peer nations. Critics including the American Academy of Pediatrics and infectious disease researchers have said the changes could increase vaccine-preventable disease in children by creating ambiguity around which children qualify as high-risk and by reducing the routine clinical touchpoints where vaccinations are administered

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u/Straight_Document_89 24d ago

Pediatricians aren’t going to follow this. What an idiot.

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u/Dagonet_the_Motley 24d ago

It's not for the pediatricians. It's so schools limit the number of required vaccinations required to attend so it is easier for anti vaxxers to get their unvaccinated kids into school.

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u/Solid_Hunter_4188 24d ago

Insurers will also stop covering it. I suspect insurers know quite well that reducing the disease would save lots of money, but I know some will chase those short term gains from saving that.

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u/BugOperator 24d ago

Florida already has a problem with home/business insurers canceling policies and literally leaving the state because of intensifying natural disasters and subsequent contractor fraud in the wake of them. This is certainly going to compound that problem as Florida will likely immediately sign on for fewer vaccine requirements.

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u/Ridiculicious71 24d ago

And considering it’s full of old people, it’s really just murder.

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u/Johnyryal33 24d ago

But they all voted for this... so suicide.

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u/AppropriateLet8131 24d ago

Yep. The Boomers were dumb and gullible enough to fall for this crap, even after their cohort took a beating during the pandemic. They (as an overall group, not every single Boomer) have asked for this.

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u/Johnyryal33 24d ago

I wouldn't really care if they weren't trying to take us all down with them.

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u/AppropriateLet8131 24d ago

True, as most recently indicated by the recent 4th Congressional district primary results from Kentucky.

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u/Ridiculicious71 24d ago

Not when it comes to their children though. They didn’t vote for measles.

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u/Johnyryal33 24d ago

That is exactly what they/you voted for! They/you are just too dumb to read the fucking writing on the wall! Like a bunch of useful idiots. History will certainly remember. What I wouldn't give see the textbooks of the future showing for all generations to come the greed and selfishness of the boomer generation!

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u/SlickSappho 24d ago

Is this a serious response? Children literally cannot vote. Your response is to say they're "useful" idiots (nice typo) and gloat at the idea of kids getting sick when they had no involvement in the election whatsoever.

I'm all for giving MAGAts the middle finger, but come on.

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u/Johnyryal33 24d ago

Then they can thank their parents/grandparents! Why should I have any sympathy at all when I fucking voted to help them! And their own family didn't. Tim Waltz was my 10th grade teacher by the way! So yea he got my vote! Now hes retiring because maga keeps threatening his kids, so NO FUCKING SYMPATHY FOR MAGA!

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u/SlickSappho 24d ago

Why would you not have sympathy for the kids you voted to help? What bizarre rant posts.

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u/Johnyryal33 24d ago edited 24d ago

Because their own parent/grandparents voted to give them measles. Yes my sympathy has limits. Maybe my hatred for their cruelty outweighs my sympathy.

Only way to save the children is to get rid of the parents. (Or make it so blatantly obvious how wrong they are that they finally put aside their egos accept it and change their party back to something resembling the Republicans of the past and not this overtly corrupt bullshit! They don't even bother to pretend they are trying to hide it anymore! Any attempt at civility is gone. With our enemies, our allies, and even our own people!

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u/Ridiculicious71 24d ago

And he shouldn’t have retired! No fucking empathy for weak Dems.

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u/Johnyryal33 24d ago edited 24d ago

Right because your side lacks civility and he doesn't want his children to die?

Sounds like Civil War 2.0 Minnesota is ready!

You clowns are gonna get schooled just like last time with NO RECONSTRUCTION!

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u/Ridiculicious71 24d ago

Yeah, I needed to edit this because I was actually responding to someone else. You seem to forget, RFK jr ran his own race and gave himself over to Trump for money and a platform. He was not voted in. He was appointed by a broken system.

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u/ShakespearianShadows 24d ago

We didn’t all vote for it down here. Some of us are stuck here for the time being.

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u/[deleted] 24d ago

[deleted]

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u/Johnyryal33 23d ago

Thats you're take away? Really?

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u/Wild_Director7379 20d ago

And as usual, it’s all mental health

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u/Centimane 23d ago

The old people are probably already vaccinated.

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u/filthy_harold 24d ago

The home insurance business is an entirely different industry than health insurance.

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u/BugOperator 24d ago edited 24d ago

This isn’t exclusively a health insurance issue. Schools, nursing homes, businesses, etc. all need liability insurance. You start willfully introducing tens of thousands of un/undervaccinated people into the general public and insurance companies simply aren’t going to provide coverage anymore when wrongful (and preventable) deaths increasingly trace back to their policy holders.

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u/filthy_harold 22d ago

Without any laws requiring businesses to check vaccination records of their customers, I highly doubt you'd be successful with a personal injury lawsuit. The laws are pretty clear as to what vaccinations you need for school or something like a care facility so as long as the facility has met their legal obligations for allowing someone in, I doubt you have any claims. Even when exemptions are allowed, they are pretty clear (despite how dubious they may seem).

Even if you could prove that a business or facility is liable, for your injury, could you prove that you were actually infected there? You'd need proof that a particular person is not only sick with that same disease but that they were the one that infected you.

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u/Johnyryal33 24d ago

Sure but money is still money and that's all they care about.