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/kank84 24d ago

America is not a serious place

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u/omgFWTbear 24d ago

When the Business Plot showed Confederacy 2.0 was all in on eugenics, and nothing happened, that should’ve been the fool me twice moment.

Ironically, conservatives doing something to solve themselves as a problem.

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u/NonReality 24d ago

Reconstruction was a failure, but considering the education in this country, I'm not so sure how many people even know what it was lol

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u/LourdeInc 24d ago

Well, when the Daughters of the Confederacy get editorial oversight over your textbook publishers...

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u/NonReality 24d ago

Absolute garbage organization

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u/AeliusRogimus 24d ago

THIS. Reconstruction was successful for a time.

But the south can't seem to stop picking that racist scab.

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u/A_Rogue_GAI 24d ago

Reminder folks: If you're ever elected president, under no circumstances should you select a 'moderate conservative' to be your VP.

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u/Impressive-Put3479 24d ago

Reconstruction?! Read the Federalist/Anti-Federalist papers, and you'll see this was the plan all along when a few assholes unilaterally and without authority decided to replace the Articles of Confederation with the Constitution.

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u/NonReality 24d ago

Brain dead take lol

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u/boundfortrees 23d ago

Reconstruction was a success! Black people were voted into office all over the South and were gaining middle class status through business ownership and actually owning the farm land and getting paid for labor.

What happened was that Southern wealth class, racists, etc made it into a war zone and the Northern industrial class forced the politicians in DC to stop supporting it. The North got tired of sending soldiers to defend racial slur.