A powerful advisory group within the CDC voted Friday to overturn a longstanding precaution designed to protect newborn babies.
If the change is approved by the acting director of the agency, the government will no longer universally recommend the hepatitis B vaccine at birth. The shot, which provides protection from the leading cause of liver cancer, has been standard practice for newborns since 1991.
Friday’s 8-3 vote is a milestone for Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who quickly began reshaping the public health agency to reflect his personal views on vaccines after being sworn in early this year. Kennedy has long been a prominent voice among anti-vaccine activists, a position that sparked broad concern that the CDC might break with scientific consensus arou

Fast Company

News 8 WROC
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
Local News in Florida
America News
Arizona Republic
PHL17 Health
The Atlantic
Denver7 News
KLCC
The Daily Beast
MLB