Close Menu
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Career
  • Sports
  • Climate
  • Science
    • Tech
  • Culture
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
Categories
  • Breaking News (3,407)
  • Business (268)
  • Career (2,905)
  • Climate (184)
  • Culture (2,873)
  • Education (3,033)
  • Finance (147)
  • Health (654)
  • Lifestyle (2,784)
  • Science (2,709)
  • Sports (190)
  • Tech (136)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Hand Picked

Pearson to Acquire Career and Technical Education Leader eDynamic Learning

June 14, 2025

Across Generations, Humans Are Driven to Keep Culture Alive

June 14, 2025

NU regents to consider tuition increase, $20 million additional cuts in proposed budget

June 14, 2025

Spirometry Training Program | Spirometry

June 14, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
onlyfacts24
  • Breaking News

    About 60 people arrested after veterans’ anti-ICE demonstration in Washington, DC, police say

    June 14, 2025

    ‘Drop Israel’: How military escalation with Iran divides Trump’s base | Donald Trump News

    June 14, 2025

    Trump approves U.S. Steel merger with Japan’s Nippon Steel

    June 14, 2025

    Golfer Victor Perez makes second-ever US Open hole-in-one at Oakmont

    June 14, 2025

    Judge rules Mahmoud Khalil can remain in custody amid green card dispute | Donald Trump News

    June 14, 2025
  • Business

    Top use cases for AI in Ecommerce

    June 10, 2025

    Ease of doing business in Honduras by topic 2019| Statista

    June 9, 2025

    Ease of doing business in Guatemala by topic 2019| Statista

    June 8, 2025

    Artificial intelligence in business – Statistics & Facts

    June 6, 2025

    Ease of doing business in Panama by topic 2019| Statista

    June 5, 2025
  • Career

    Pearson to Acquire Career and Technical Education Leader eDynamic Learning

    June 14, 2025

    Giada De Laurentiis Reveals Jaw-Dropping Career News 2 Years After Leaving Food Network

    June 14, 2025

    Lenoir County students gain early career experience through new workforce ignite program

    June 14, 2025

    SFPD highlights Career Cadet Program

    June 14, 2025

    James Kahn Talks Life, Career and New Memoir

    June 14, 2025
  • Sports

    NBA expansion is noteworthy topic at Finals, but progress remains slow going

    June 14, 2025

    Nikola Topic is Four Games Away from History

    June 10, 2025

    Deep passing once again a hot topic at Chiefs OTAs

    June 5, 2025

    Sarah Spain credits ESPN for increased women’s sports coverage

    June 3, 2025

    Stuttgart’s Stiller remains a hot topic at Liverpool

    May 17, 2025
  • Climate

    Environmental justice: the right to clean water

    June 10, 2025

    UN Trade and Development at the 3rd UN Ocean Conference (UNOC3)

    June 7, 2025

    Neural topic modeling reveals German television’s climate change coverage

    June 6, 2025

    Key Initiatives by Indian Government to Manage Plastic Waste; Check Here

    June 5, 2025

    MoneycontrolWorld Environment Day 2025: Theme, Significance and Why It Matters More Than EverWorld Environment Day 2025 urges global action to end plastic pollution. Join the movement by reducing plastic waste and embracing….1 day ago

    June 5, 2025
  • Science
    1. Tech
    2. View All

    DeepSeek is going to be the biggest topic in tech earnings this week, analysts say

    June 2, 2025

    Alt-tech – Statistics & Facts

    May 26, 2025

    Science and Tech revision checklist

    May 24, 2025

    Top 20 Tech Podcasts Worth Listening To (2025)

    May 24, 2025

    Science news this week: Overdue earthquakes and star-shaped brain cells

    June 14, 2025

    Hybrid rocket motor developed by USU researchers in collaboration with NASA

    June 14, 2025

    New Deepest Map Of The Universe Spans 98 Percent Of The Age Of The Cosmos

    June 14, 2025

    How scientists confirmed the existence of 200-million-year-old species thought to be extinct

    June 14, 2025
  • Culture

    Across Generations, Humans Are Driven to Keep Culture Alive

    June 14, 2025

    Cuts to Virginia Humanities threaten history, arts programs | News

    June 14, 2025

    Ojai Valley News7 decades of color and curiosity — the art of Karen K. LewisFor 70 years, Karen K. Lewis has painted her way across America's artistic landscape, from the vibrant energy of Washington, D.C., to the avant-garde….7 hours ago

    June 14, 2025

    Pixar leadership: Pixar exec slams 3 A.M. calls as toxic, cites Jobs, Musk, and Bezos as icons of a culture he’s leaving behind

    June 14, 2025

    Who was the real Andy Warhol?

    June 14, 2025
  • Health

    Spirometry Training Program | Spirometry

    June 14, 2025

    How often Americans hear about trending health topics like Ozempic, raw milk, Botox

    June 12, 2025

    Cyprus Shipping News- Cyprus Shipping NewsHealth experts at OneCare Group (OCG) say it is time to address the growing concerns surrounding the sexual health and emotional wellbeing….7 hours ago

    June 12, 2025

    Medical association | Healthcare, Advocacy & Education

    June 10, 2025

    U.S. Global Health Legislation Tracker

    June 9, 2025
  • Lifestyle
Contact
onlyfacts24
Home»Science»How one mom is navigating vaccines’ uncertain future
Science

How one mom is navigating vaccines’ uncertain future

June 11, 2025No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
061025 eg vaccines feat.jpg
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

After my son was born in December, new parent questions consumed my thoughts. Is he sleeping enough? Is he screaming because he’s hungry or his diaper is dirty? And is poop normally that color?

Now that I’ve somewhat mastered those questions, and he’s sleeping through the night, I’m still up obsessing over a new issue: Vaccines.

My worries spiked when an outbreak of measles flared up in West Texas in late January. Two unvaccinated children have died. Then funding cuts brought many clinical trials, including ones for new vaccines, to a halt. In May, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration took steps to limit COVID-19 vaccines to adults ages 65 and up and Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said that the vaccine was no longer recommended for healthy children and pregnant women. (For now, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says those groups may still receive the vaccines.)

Sign up for our newsletter

We summarize the week’s scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.

And on June 9, Kennedy, a known vaccine skeptic, removed all current members of the CDC’s Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices. The panel makes recommendations for how and when vaccines should be used, including setting the childhood vaccine schedule and determining who’s eligible for COVID-19 shots. Its recommendations ensure vaccine access and are the basis for what shots insurance will cover.

While Kennedy says he plans to reconstitute ACIP, the move intensifies the uncertainty around the future of vaccines and whether the U.S. government will continue to recommend some lifesaving shots. The panel is poised to meet June 25 to 27 to discuss a variety of vaccines, including the rollout of an updated COVID-19 shot for the fall.

“Up until a couple of months ago, vaccine policy in the United States was generally science-based and not political,” says Kawsar Talaat, a vaccine researcher and infectious diseases physician at Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health. “We’ve had political interventions here and there, but overall vaccine policy and recommendations are science-based, and the involvement of politics in something that should be evidence-based is quite concerning.”

My husband and I — both trained as scientists — know to follow the data. We took steps to protect our newborn from the litany of winter-circulating respiratory diseases by restricting visitors and asking our family to get COVID-19, whooping cough and flu shots. I got my own vaccines, as well one for RSV, while pregnant. My body shared the antibodies that it made with my son, protecting both of us in one fell swoop.

“Vaccines are incredibly safe and save lives,” Talaat says. “And we have gotten complacent, I think, because … you can’t see something that you are preventing.” But to put a number to it, vaccination has prevented 154 million deaths globally since 1974, researchers reported May 2024 in the Lancet. Of those prevented deaths, 101 million were among infants younger than 1 year old.

Still, as more reports of measles cases emerged from Texas and beyond, I worried that an outbreak might pop up where we live and that our too-young-to-be-vaccinated baby could be exposed. I wanted to know my options.

Weighing getting an early measles vaccination

Children become eligible for the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine at 1 year old. Through frantic Googling, I learned that babies living in areas with an outbreak or those traveling internationally can get the shot as early as 6 months old. At our son’s 4-month checkup in April, his pediatrician confirmed that he could get the MMR vaccine early if we wanted. He would still follow the usual series of shots, receiving one after his first birthday and another after he turned 4.

I checked out the pros and cons of an early MMR vaccination with pediatric infectious diseases physician Brenda I. Anosike of Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City.

An early dose can reduce the risks of severe disease and complications such as pneumonia or brain swelling if an infant is infected, she says. But vaccine protection isn’t as robust in children younger than a year.

Sponsor Message

“That is why we don’t willy-nilly try to give every single person the vaccine at 6 months of age,” Anosike says. Antibodies passed from mom to baby “can actually interfere with the vaccine itself,” blunting the baby’s immune response. It’s better to wait until protection from mom fades away.

The measles outbreak — which has reached 1,168 confirmed cases in 33 states, according to the CDC — seems to be slowing. And while the CDC issued a travel advisory on May 28 recommending that all adult international travelers should be fully vaccinated for measles and young infants should get an early dose, we are not traveling soon. Measles vaccination rates where we live have fallen below the herd immunity threshold of 95 percent but remain above 90 percent. Our risk, thankfully, remains low.

With that information in hand, we decided to forgo the early extra MMR dose. It makes sense for babies at high risk of exposure to get vaccinated early to prevent severe disease, says Lori Handy, an infectious diseases pediatrician at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. But “if it’s still highly unlikely you’re going to be exposed to measles, then you want to get your dose at the time when it’s going to work the best, which is at one year of age.”

Trying to get a COVID-19 shot

Although my son probably won’t face measles, experience from previous years suggests a summer surge of COVID-19 may be around the corner. Yet it’s unclear whether I’ll easily be able to get my son vaccinated soon.

In addition to confusion about who is eligible for COVID-19 vaccines, a new HHS plan would require new vaccines to undergo placebo-controlled trials. All vaccines already do, but the plan has raised questions about whether seasonal updates to approved flu and COVID-19 shots would need to be tested. Such trials take time, making it difficult to update the shots each year to better match the viral strains that are circulating.

Conflicting messages from public health officials are already posing hurdles. Infectious diseases physician John Lynch of the University of Washington in Seattle recently advised a pregnant colleague to get vaccinated. When she tried, she was turned away by two pharmacies. “That’s the practical implication of this,” Lynch told reporters June 6 in a news briefing organized by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. People who want protection may lose access.

Infants under age 1 year, and especially those younger than 6 months old, are among the groups more likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19. Hospitalization rates for babies less than 6 months old across 12 states from October 2022 to April 2024 were roughly the same as adults ages 65 to 74, researchers reported September 2024 in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. Most of those hospitalized infants were born to mothers who had not been vaccinated.

Vaccines are the best protection against hospitalization or dying from COVID-19, says Handy, an associate director of CHOP’s Vaccine Education Center. “For young babies who don’t have the immunity that we all have from living through the pandemic, we would much rather their first exposure be through vaccine than through natural infection.”

I would also prefer my son’s immune system learn how to fight infection from a vaccine instead of the virus itself. Unfortunately, his pediatrician’s office didn’t have the vaccines on hand at his 6-month appointment. Vaccination rates among children are generally low — fewer than 20 percent of kids under 18 got the most recent COVID-19 shot, according to the CDC. So most offices don’t regularly have them, my sources told me. My next task will be calling pharmacies asking if they’re willing to give him the shot. I hope it’s not too difficult to find one.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Science news this week: Overdue earthquakes and star-shaped brain cells

June 14, 2025

Hybrid rocket motor developed by USU researchers in collaboration with NASA

June 14, 2025

New Deepest Map Of The Universe Spans 98 Percent Of The Age Of The Cosmos

June 14, 2025

How scientists confirmed the existence of 200-million-year-old species thought to be extinct

June 14, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest Posts

Pearson to Acquire Career and Technical Education Leader eDynamic Learning

June 14, 2025

Across Generations, Humans Are Driven to Keep Culture Alive

June 14, 2025

NU regents to consider tuition increase, $20 million additional cuts in proposed budget

June 14, 2025

Spirometry Training Program | Spirometry

June 14, 2025
News
  • Breaking News (3,407)
  • Business (268)
  • Career (2,905)
  • Climate (184)
  • Culture (2,873)
  • Education (3,033)
  • Finance (147)
  • Health (654)
  • Lifestyle (2,784)
  • Science (2,709)
  • Sports (190)
  • Tech (136)
  • Uncategorized (1)

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from onlyfacts24.

Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from ONlyfacts24.

News
  • Breaking News (3,407)
  • Business (268)
  • Career (2,905)
  • Climate (184)
  • Culture (2,873)
  • Education (3,033)
  • Finance (147)
  • Health (654)
  • Lifestyle (2,784)
  • Science (2,709)
  • Sports (190)
  • Tech (136)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Facebook Instagram TikTok
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
© 2025 Designed by onlyfacts24

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.