The Daily - The R.F.K. Jr. Era of Childhood Vaccines
Episode Date: January 8, 2026Warning: This episode contains strong language.The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday released new guidelines that dramaticaly cut down the number of childhood vaccines recommended b...y the federal government.Apoorva Mandavilli and Benjamin Mueller, who cover health, explain what is being cut and how it fits into Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s broader agenda.Guest:Apoorva Mandavilli, a science and global health reporter at The New York Times.Benjamin Mueller, a reporter covering health and medicine for The New York Times.Background reading: Mr. Kennedy on Monday scaled back the number of vaccines recommended for children.Here’s what to know about the new childhood vaccine schedule.Photo: Annie Rice/EPA, via ShutterstockFor more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From the New York Times, I'm Rachel Abrams, and this is The Daily.
Earlier this week, the CDC released new guidelines, which dramatically cut down the number of childhood vaccines recommended by the federal government.
Today, my colleague's Benjamin Mueller and Apurva Mandivili explain what's being cut, how this fits into the broader
agenda from Health Secretary Robert of Kennedy Jr.
It's Thursday, January, and the broader implications for public health.
Ben Aporva, thank you both so much for being here today.
Glad to be here.
Thanks so much for having us.
So ever since Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was confirmed as the health secretary.
There have been all kinds of questions about how he might seek to reshape public health policy, particularly as it relates to vaccines, which he has been openly skeptical about for years.
And this week, we saw some of the first major changes on that front.
And I want to talk about the changes, why he made them, the implications for public health.
But first, Apurva, can you just explain to us what vaccines were affected?
So before Monday, American children were supposed to routinely get vaccines for seven.
teens diseases. And on Monday, Secretary Kennedy and his associates, the other health officials,
said that that vaccine schedule for children would be pared down so that now routine recommendation
includes vaccination against 11 diseases. And which six were taken off? So the six that are now
being treated differently are respiratory syncycial virus. RSV. RSV, yes. ROTivirus, hepatitis A and B,
menendococcal vaccines, which are really for meningitis, and influenza.
And I want to clarify here that when we say they were taken off, they are still on the recommendations,
they're just recommended differently.
So in theory, these vaccines are still all on the schedule, but they are now being recommended
either for certain high-risk groups or if you don't fall into one of those groups that you
should consult with your doctor first before getting them.
So what it actually means in practice is that fewer people will get them, more people will be
confused. And the public health experts that I've been talking to feel that this will actually
undermine trust in vaccines in a very broad way. And people will start to think they're not really
necessary at all. And Ben, can you tell us a little bit about what the argument is from Secretary
Kennedy and the CDC for why this change was necessary and a good idea? Kennedy's been campaigning
about the dangers of vaccines for years. And even Trump has sort of adopted that language about kids
getting too many shots with sort of vague reference to the dangers that that might hold for kids' dangers
that doctors don't believe are actually reflected in the evidence. In this case, Kennedy has sort of
taken Denmark as his model, a country that has a much more minimal vaccine schedule than the United
States, a much smaller country, the very different health system. And the idea there seems to be
that they want to refashion the American vaccine program to sort of fit a much more pared down
schedule so it no longer tries to address all of the problems and fallibilities with the
American health system, all of the medical needs of the American population, and instead say,
you know, there should be a new system that's much more individualistic, where each kid is
consulted on their particular needs and the particular advice of their doctor rather than a sort
of one-size-fits-all, let's decide what's best for the health of the American population
generally. That seems to be a little bit of what's going on here.
It feels very spiritually connected to this idea that we've heard from Kenneth.
before about people should have autonomy with their own bodies, their own health. They should
be able to make their own choices, right?
Right. And this sort of resistance to collective thinking about the collective health
of Americans, they brand themselves as a medical freedom movement. I mean, in this case,
the vaccine schedule does not itself mandate the taking of these shots. That's happening at
the state level. So Kennedy hasn't actually sort of, in practice, freed anybody from
onerous obligations to take this or that shot with this decision itself. But yes, they are trying
to make this a much more case-by-case. You talk to your doctor and you have the power to decide
what shots your kids should be taking. Can I just ask a question about that, though, because we all
know how rushed some doctors are, how little time medical professionals have. And I feel like
one of the criticisms or pushback to that that you hear from people that are skeptical of vaccines
is that, well, in practice, I'm not reading the information sheet.
I'm not given the information sheet.
The doctor's not going over the risks with me.
What is the response to that idea?
But that's a fair point.
Doctors don't necessarily always have time to go through these things.
But the idea is that if parents do have questions, this is how they can talk about it.
There is a forum for that.
And if we are worried about doctors not having enough time to talk parents through all of the concerns,
well, we've just quadrupled that problem by putting a whole bunch of vaccines on the list.
that parents are now going to have to really talk about with their pediatricians before they can even get the shot.
I would also say the decision to put vaccines on this recommended slate of shots has not historically been taken lightly.
It's happened after consultation with doctors, members of the public, professional groups,
and those recommendations have filtered down into medical practice.
And to the extent they've been adopted, they've been adopted because they were studied pretty extensively and determined to be safe and effective.
And so the people that presumably have spent a lot of time thinking,
studying, writing, researching the safety of vaccines.
How are the medical and scientific communities responding to these changes?
They've been sort of broadly falling into two camps.
I'd say I've talked to a lot of people who are optimistic, hoping that pediatricians and
parents really recognize the value of vaccines and that when it really comes down to it,
people will continue to go on as they always have, and nothing much will change.
And then on the other side are experts who are genuinely really worried because they
are already seeing some parents coming in saying,
I'm hearing is the government is saying these vaccines are not needed anymore. And do I even really
need to get this one? And I don't know. It seems like too much, et cetera. But pretty much all of them
agree that this is creating a lot of confusion and that confusion is never good when it comes to public
health. One really quick, I think, interesting thing to note here is that they've been talking a lot
about Denmark. And the person who has done probably the most work on vaccine safety is in Denmark. He's
part of Denmark's CDC, and I've spoken to him a few times now, and he is just baffled by these
decisions and does not understand why the U.S. is doing this.
Wait, just to explain that. Why would it be so baffling that the U.S. would want to emulate Denmark?
Denmark is a tiny country with impeccable health care, free prenatal care, really excellent
screening of pregnant women. They have decided not to have quite as many shots. They have 10.
They're really the outlier when we talk about the world. And they've done that because they have to
purchase a lot of vaccines. And for such a small country, sometimes the burden of disease
doesn't make those vaccines quite as cost effective. So it's really an economic decision.
But in the United States, we don't have the kind of rigorous follow-up and free care that would
make it okay for a kid to not be vaccinated and maybe get sick because in Denmark, that kid would
get seen right away, get treated right away at zero or very little cost to the parents. Whereas here,
prevention is really the best option. Obviously, all of these vaccines that are coming off the schedule,
they all do different things, they have different backstories, but I wonder if we can pick one
to focus on that might help us explain sort of how we got to this point. Like, maybe you can
tell me about how a particular vaccine got added to the childhood vaccine schedule and then
later became a target. I think hepatitis B is a really interesting example here. This is a virus that
is highly contagious, can be very dangerous, it infects the liver, and it spreads through blood
and other bodily fluids. So finally, after years of work in the early 1980s, scientists develop a
vaccine. It's highly effective. It's safe, and federal health officials decide to recommend it
to groups that they deem to be at high risk for the virus, which is intravenous drug users
and men who have sex with men, for example. And there's a lot of optimism that they're finally
going to turn back the tide of this virus.
Instead, the opposite happens.
Cases of hepatitis B keep climbing.
Hundreds of thousands of people are getting infected.
And I think in that story, we learn about what some of the holes were in that initial vaccination strategy.
Which were?
Well, so one problem with that first vaccination strategy was that doctors turned out not to be very good at identifying which patients would be well served by the vaccine.
And some of those very patients either didn't know that they should get the shot or were resistant to getting it because they were afraid of the vaccine.
It was a new vaccine.
There were sort of false rumors spreading
that it might be causing HIV.
There was also a second problem,
which is that doctors didn't always recognize
in what patient populations this virus was, in fact,
spreading.
That included kids, many of whom were getting infected,
some of whom were facing health problems
years down the road from this virus.
And those kids were not covered
by that first vaccination strategy,
which focused on high-risk adults.
There were something like 20,000 cases a year in children,
and not all of them,
were even getting the virus from their mothers, which was thought to be the main mode of transmission.
There were studies at the time suggesting that something like half of the cases in these young children
were of unknown source, potentially from other children in the community or from people they lived
with because you can get the virus from crusted blood. You can get it from a shared toothbrush
or from a towel that has dried body material on it. So this is a very, very highly infectious virus.
And so they started to recognize that babies really needed protecting, and they went after this in a few different ways.
They started out initially with that high-risk group.
They expanded that to include pregnant women.
But in 1991, they decided, okay, this is not working.
We really need to protect these babies.
And the only way we're going to be able to get to every single one is to do it at birth.
So 10 years after that initial rollout, federal health officials reconvene and decide that, in fact, they should start recommending the vaccine to infants.
And it's remarkably successful.
Over the next few decades, cases of hepatitis B fall in children, young adults by something like 99%.
The vaccine is widely taken up.
It's safe, including an infant.
It's highly effective.
And it's that very strategy, the strategy of vaccinating infants, that Kennedy has now decided to effectively undo.
The really interesting thing here is that that whole colorful history of how the universal bee vaccination at birth came to be also lent itself to becoming this very popular anti-year.
Vax talking point. They started saying that essentially the country was vaccinating all babies as a
safety net for adults, that they were vaccinating infants to protect these high-risk groups.
And you have to remember, this is the late 1980s, early 90s, a time when HIV is rampant in the
country. There's all this homophobia, this villainization of gay people. There's tons of fear.
But at that same time, scientists were also starting to figure out that infants were really at risk
of this disease.
all of that helps explain why in this country public health policy changed.
It also helps explain why it has run squarely into the Maha movement.
I think that's exactly right.
I think the vaccine program that developed over those years has now run headlong into a Maha movement
that is dead set against a one-size-fits-all vaccination strategy that's much more interested
in a sort of individualistic approach to the health of children that distrusts drugs.
and vaccines and sees them as sort of another contaminant on top of a list of contaminants
in the food supply and in the air and in the water.
And it also sort of sits uneasily with this idea that Kennedy seems to have about the best way
of protecting the health of Americans, which is, rather than introducing vaccines into their
body to strengthen their defenses against illness, to, for example, improve their diet.
We saw that Kennedy just recently remade the American dietary guidelines to,
recommend that Americans eat more whole foods, vegetables, more proteins, which fits squarely
in the middle of this Kennedy's strategy of trying to fortify people's own bodies, strengthen
people's own resources against disease, rather than vaccinating them as a sort of way to
protect against very dangerous illness.
After the break, what these changes mean now and moving forward.
So, Porva, you said earlier that theoretically these vaccines will still be available to the people that want them.
But obviously, these guidelines are changing.
I can imagine that if you are a parent who wants a vaccine for your child, this is all very confusing.
How are people supposed to navigate this?
I think it's very important to know, first of all, that for parents who really want vaccines for their kids,
insurance will still cover the costs.
They will not have to pay out of pocket
and they can find pediatricians
who will give them the shots.
This idea of shared clinical decision
making is what became really important
in this new schedule. Talk to your doctor first.
So on a very practical
level, the new guidelines
won't change much for
parents who want the vaccines
and pediatricians who are administering them.
Right. If pre-nutritions already wanted to give the vaccine,
that should not change.
Correct. Even if you're not in a high-risk group,
you should be able to get a vaccine that theoretically is only for high risk groups.
Where I think we're really going to see changes is at the individual level, where individual
parents are confused and not sure what to do, and pediatricians may run out of time to counsel
their patients on what to do. I think that's where things are really going to start to fray.
And then, you know, in terms of mandates, which is really where rubber hits the road for vaccines,
every state has requirements for children to enter daycare or kindergarten, and those are actually
very similar across states, blue and red, very few differences. And so far at least, it seems like
that may not change either. I was speaking with the New York State Health Commissioner who's been
having a lot of conversations with his colleagues in both red and blue states, and he was saying
that nobody really wants to change anything. So unless their governors intervene, I think things
will stay as they are.
So, but theoretically, a state governor could say, okay, the CDC is now recommending that
these six vaccines come off the schedule.
I want to see changes in my state, and I will direct my state health department to change
the requirements for, let's say, the vaccines you need for preschool.
And if that were to happen, explain what happens next.
What happens is they will probably have a fight on their hands, because vaccines, even with
all of the anti-vaccine sentiments you hear, are still.
really popular with most people. There's strong bipartisan support for childhood vaccination. And
in states where people have proposed making changes, it has not always gone well. Okay, so it sounds
like even if things do not change for the time being at the state level, as you were saying,
Apurva, practically speaking, fewer kids are going to get this vaccine. Either it's because
the clinicians don't have time to go over the risks, parents are confused, or perhaps other
reasons. And so therefore, we can expect that there will be more illness of some amount in
this country. And I wonder if we have any sense of the scale of that. Well, we have some idea for
some of the diseases, right, from before the vaccines were in routine use. So if you think about
something like rotavirus, before the vaccine was in routine use, there were something like
70,000 hospitalizations in kids a year. And that's the worst case scenario. But also it's
important to remember we're a big country with a big population. So even a small drop in
vaccination rates, which we have already seen in this country, results in quite a few cases.
We're seeing that unfold now with measles, for example. The vaccination rate for measles
is fallen by something like two percentage points. But this year, we've had more cases than
in the mid-1990s. And it's fallen, by the way, because of public messaging, not necessarily
because of vaccine changes. Measles, I should note, is still on this schedule. It is on the schedule.
And the reason it fell as a combination of a couple of different things, it started to fall during the
pandemic because of sort of infrastructure, you know, clinics were closed. People couldn't get to the
clinics. And then also, yeah, the combination of sort of rising anti-vaccine sentiment. And that
certainly got worse this last year. And at the end of this month, we are most likely going to
lose our status for measles elimination in this country. So the United States will no longer be
considered to have eliminated measles. There's this idea, I think, that healthy children will somehow
be sort of excluded from these consequences, protected from these consequences, that the rising tide of
illnesses like measles will sort of only or predominantly affect sick kids with weakened immune systems
and that's just not been true. I think it's been part of the sort of Kennedy and Kennedy aligned
thinking on what might happen in a country with fewer vaccines. But what we've seen is that
healthy children too have been stricken with these viruses and gotten very sick from them.
We've seen, for example, in the last couple winters that the seasonal flu has exacted a really
high toll on American children. Hundreds of kids died last winter.
from the flu, which was the highest toll in more than a decade. This year's flu is again a really
devastating virus. And so the consequences of lower vaccination rates, we're already seeing
them play out among American children. And there's one other giant thing that is really weighing
on the minds of some of the public health experts that I've been talking to, which is the vaccine
liability protection program we have in this country. So basically, companies that
make vaccines are protected from what legal authorities call frivolous lawsuits, meaning people
can't just go sue these companies willy-nilly. And that was put in place because vaccines are not
huge profit makers. And companies... Meaning the margins are not that great. The margins are not
that great. And companies were finding it very difficult to go about their business because of these
lawsuits. And so they basically set up the system where companies pay a tax for the vaccines that they make.
and people who think they've been harmed can take their case to this vaccine court and get financial compensation.
That system has been there since 1986 to make sure that vaccine companies stay in the business.
There is some question about whether taking these six shots out of the routine vaccination schedule affects that whole thing.
So far, it seems like it should be okay, but that's still an open question.
And companies are really watching this very closely because vaccines are not that profitable.
And at some point, if things get very difficult for them to do business in the United States, they may decide to just not do business here.
Meaning that the companies might say the liability is too high. The margins are too small. It's not worth us to manufacture this vaccine in the United States, ergo, even if you wanted one of these six shots, it's been removed from the list, you might not be able to get it. That would be the worst case scenario that highly speculative, not on the table yet, but that's what you're referring to.
Absolutely speculative. We're not anywhere near there yet, but that is the big worry because it's a real worry.
Ben, what do you make of RFK's approach here? Because from everything we've been talking about, it seems like these are both meaningful changes, a meaningful revision to the vaccine schedule that might eventually have some long-term consequences, but also a smaller step than it could have been in terms of immediate change.
I think part of what we hear and what Apurva was just describing was some of the concessions that Secretary Kennedy has made to the sort of political realities around vaccines in this country.
He is maintaining access to the shots for parents and physicians who decide that they're warranted for kids.
He's keeping insurance coverage in place.
He's not yet stripping liability protections from these major shots.
And I think that political reality is that vaccines are still popular among the majority of Americans.
A majority of Americans still believes the childhood vaccines are highly effective and safe,
even as those margins are getting narrower and more and more Republicans,
especially MAGA-supporting Republicans, are growing more distrustful of vaccines.
So on the one hand, Kennedy has this sort of state of public opinion,
which makes it politically somewhat risky to take too big a sledgehammer to the sort of American vaccine program.
On the other hand, though, there is Kennedy's base, the sort of very committed anti-vaccine activists who have been working at Kennedy's side for years, who are raising money for him, working for sort of outside groups, supporting his agenda, the sort of activists who were on his podcast for years promoting their opposition to vaccines.
And those folks, I would say, over the last year, have gotten a little bit impatient with Secretary Kennedy at times about the sort of pace of changes to the vaccine program.
They felt like we helped put Kennedy in power to sort of take this bulldozer to the American vaccine program, and why isn't he yet using that bulldozer?
And to that point, though, I wonder, how is that base reacting to this news, which I would imagine is not as far as they would want him to go?
And what does that maybe tell us about what we might expect in the future under his leadership?
I think they've been encouraged by how far Kennedy went and sort of taking.
this chunk out of the vaccine schedule. But they're not resting on their laurels. They're not
sort of patting themselves on the back yet. They want to see more, they're clamoring for more
action. They are highly concerned about the COVID shot, which those allies of Kennedy blame for
sickening many Americans, despite that shot remaining safe and effective. So I think public health
experts and Kennedy supporters alike are sort of looking to this next year as a test, at
testing ground for how far Kennedy can afford to go in dismantling the country's vaccine program.
Kennedy is walking a fine line between the demands of his base and sort of what public opinion
will tolerate in terms of new restrictions on vaccine access. And there are a lot of open questions
about how far he's willing to go and how much support President Trump will deliver him in enacting
that agenda.
Apurva, Ben, thank you both so much.
Thank you.
Thanks, Rachel.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
To ICE?
Get the fuck out of Minneapolis.
We do not want you here.
The mayor of Minneapolis, Jacob Fry,
is demanding the federal immigration officials
immediately leave the city after an ICE agent shot and killed a U.S. citizen in her car on Wednesday.
Your stated reason for being in this city is to create some kind of safety, and you are doing
exactly the opposite. Somebody is dead. That's on you.
The shooting occurred about a mile from the location where George Floyd was killed by police in 2020.
A video recorded by a bystander shows ICE officers demanding that a woman get out of her car.
When she drives forward, an officer fires into her car as witnesses scream out in horror.
What did you do?
You!
Shame!
Shame!
Shame! Shame!
After the shooting, the Department of Homeland Security accused the woman of weaponizing her vehicle.
It was an act of domestic terrorism.
An officer of ours acted quickly and defensively shot to protect himself and the
But city officials disputed that claim, and protesters quickly took to the streets to express their outrage.
And, in an Oval Office interview with the Times on Wednesday night, President Trump suggested that the United States would be involved in Venezuela for years, following his ouster of its president, Nicholas Maduro.
How long do you think he'll be running in Venezuela?
Only time we'll tell.
I would say much longer.
We have to rebuild, you have to rebuild the country, and we will rebuild it in a very profitable way.
That interview with the president will be the subject of tomorrow's episode of the show.
Today's episode was produced by Alex Stern, Olivia Nett, Nina Feldman, and Stellitan.
with help from Osta Chudderbady.
It was edited by Chris Haxel and Devin Taylor,
with research help by Susan Lee.
Contains music by Marion Lazzano
and was engineered by Chris Wood.
Special thanks to Kyle Grandillo.
That's it for the Daily.
I'm Rachel Abrams. See you tomorrow.
