CDC Recommends New Hep B Vaccine for Pregnant Women, Removes Warning on Lack of Safety Data

0
252

by Brenda Baletti, Ph.D., Childrens Health Defense:

Changes to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) updated 2025 immunization schedule for childrenadults and pregnant women published last month consisted largely of timing revisions, newly approved brands of existing vaccines — including a new Hep B vaccine for pregnant women — or additional shots recommended for immunocompromised people.

The CDC didn’t add new types of vaccines to the schedule — last year the agency added COVID-19 vaccines and RSV shots for children, RSV for older adults and mpox for high-risk adults.

TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/

The CDC now recommends more than 200 shots over an individual’s lifetime. In 1983, the CDC recommended just 11 doses of seven vaccines for children. There were no vaccine recommendations for adults, including pregnant women, before 1986, when the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986 granted vaccine manufacturers protection from liability for vaccine injuries.

Pregnant women until 2012 were advised against getting most vaccines based on concerns the vaccines could harm the fetus.

Now the CDC recommends five or more routine shots (seven or more vaccines) during pregnancy, including flu, COVID-19, Tdap (tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis), RSV or respiratory syncytial virus, Hepatitis B or Hep B, Hep A (if at risk for infection) and possibly a flu booster.

The CDC says getting vaccinated while pregnant is essential because it helps mothers avoid disease and also creates antibodies that will protect their babies during the first few months of life before they can be vaccinated themselves.

However, experts who spoke with The Defender said the rising number of recommended shots for pregnant women is concerning, particularly because of the lack of randomized controlled trials large enough to identify safety issues and because long-term safety data are lacking.

“Vaccine safety data are scarce,” said Children’s Health Defense Senior Research Scientist Karl Jablonowski. “In pregnancy, it’s even more scarce. And it’s almost non-existent in situations where multiple vaccines are administered during pregnancy — which is the clinical reality.”

Where data do exist, the sample sizes are often so small the study is practically unusable, Jablonowski said.

Read More @ ChildrensHealthDefense.org