Your Child’s Pediatrician May Oppose New CDC Vaccine Limits: What to Know

But many pediatricians and other healthcare providers, led by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), are urging parents to ignore the changes and continue to immunize their children as before to protect against potentially serious illness.
Here’s how this all might play out if you’re a parent who wants your child to be vaccinated, and what you need to know to navigate this complicated situation.
How Have the Vaccine Recommendations Changed, and Why?
Previously, these six vaccines were a default opt-in for parents, meaning that, unless otherwise directed, the action was to vaccinate. Now, for immunizations in the shared decision-making category, the action is not to vaccinate.
Major Medical Groups and Children’s Hospitals Are Pushing Back
“Our stance is that the science has not changed,” Dr. Hasson says. “We continue to stand by the proven vaccine schedule that has kept [children] safe for many, many years.”
The AAP has argued against basing U.S. childhood vaccine recommendations on Denmark’s — a country far smaller than the United States, where the population is relatively homogeneous and healthcare is tax-funded and mostly free and accessible for everyone.
“Before vaccines, diseases like rotavirus caused thousands of hospitalizations and deaths each year in infants and toddlers,” Dr. Nosal said, and rates of these illnesses dropped once vaccines became routine.
Rates of illnesses like measles, whooping cough, and the flu have been rising recently, and health officials say declining vaccination rates are one reason why.
Major pediatric hospitals are also pushing back against the CDC changes. “We decided internally and communicated with all of our patients that we’re going to continue to follow the AAP guidance. It’s the schedule that we have confidence in because it reflects the decades of scientific data that’s been collected that demonstrates vaccines are safe, effective, and really lifesaving,” says Lori Handy, MD, an associate director of the Vaccine Education Center at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP).
The data behind the new federal schedule changes are “not available or not transparent, and without that data, it’s really hard to understand why some of those changes would be made,” Dr. Handy says.
As for the Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, “We will continue to follow evidence-based immunization recommendations from the California Department of Public Health, the West Coast Health Alliance, and the American Academy of Pediatrics, and strongly encourage families to stay up-to-date on all recommended vaccines,” said a spokesperson.
“Vaccines prevent serious illness, hospitalization, and death,” they added, “especially for infants and medically vulnerable children.”
What Could Change About Your Family’s Vaccine Access?
If you are looking to protect a healthy child against the flu, for instance, you may have in the past had easy access to the vaccine just by walking into a pharmacy. Now, you will need to first make an appointment with a healthcare provider to get approval.
“Not every family has the time off work for that,” Hasson said. “Not everybody can take their kids out of school for that. Not everybody has transportation or the means to be able to do that.”
A further obstacle may be an individual pediatrician’s unwillingness or inability to contradict CDC directives. “The challenge is that an individual pediatrician may decide not to recommend that vaccine in the same way, or to stock that vaccine as they used to,” Handy says. “So, it will be important for parents to really have that conversation to understand what their individual provider is doing and what will be available to their children.”
Confusion Is Understandable
It’s understandable to be uncertain about vaccines given all the noise on social media, Handy says. If you are a parent you should expect to have more vaccination-related conversations with your child’s healthcare provider, Hasson adds.
In her practice, Nosal said she counsels parents about the diseases that vaccines prevent and why it matters, how well the vaccine works, and the known risks or side effects. She said she answers their questions, listens to their concerns, and guides them “using the best science and evidence-based information while respecting that this is your child and your family.”
- CDC Acts on Presidential Memorandum to Update Childhood Immunization Schedule. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. January 5, 2026.
- Childhood Immunization Schedule by Recommendation Group. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
- ACIP Shared Clinical Decision-Making Recommendations. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. January 7, 2026.
- The New Federal Vaccine Schedule for Children: What Changed and What Are the Implications? KFF. January 9, 2026.
- AAP Immunization Schedule. American Academy of Pediatrics. November 21, 2025.
- AAP Opposes Federal Health Officials’ Unprecedented Move to Remove Universal Childhood Immunization Recommendations. American Academy of Pediatrics. January 5, 2026.
- Birth Through Age 18 Immunization Schedule. AAFP.
- AAFP Supports Maintaining Universal Hepatitis B Vaccination at Birth. AAFP. December 5, 2025.

Emily Kay Votruba
Fact-Checker
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Erica Sweeney
Author
Erica Sweeney has been a journalist for more than two decades. These days, she mostly covers health and wellness as a freelance writer. Her work regularly appears in The New York Times, Men’s Health, HuffPost, Self, and many other publications. She has a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, where she previously worked in local media and still lives.