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What Is The Childhood Vaccine Schedule? A Look At Immunizations By Age
FILE - A nurse holds out a tray of immunization's at the city of Newark's "School Bus Express" free immunization program for Newark youth on August 28, 2013 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
WASHINGTON - Starting at birth, U.S. Children are recommended to get vaccinations to protect against diseases on a schedule set by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The immunization schedule protects against 14 potentially serious diseases before a child's second birthday, based on how their immune system responds to vaccines at various ages, and how likely a baby is to be exposed to a particular disease.
Who sets the vaccination schedule?The CDC publishes written recommendations for vaccinating U.S. Children and adults to protect against vaccine-preventable diseases.
Dig deeper:
Medical and public health experts review available data on newly-licensed and existing vaccines. The vaccine experts, as well as scientists, doctors, and public health professionals, form what's called the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP). This committee meets three times a year to discuss recommendations and to consider the following:
The final vaccine recommendations include the number of doses of each vaccine, the timing of each dose, the age when infants and children should receive it, and precautions, as well as information on who should not receive the vaccine.
Based on the ACIP's recommendations, the CDC sets the immunization schedules.
Big picture view:
Childhood vaccine science was a recent topic of discussion during Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s confirmation hearings to lead the Department of Health and Human Services. The role oversees vaccine research, approval and recommendations, as well as food safety and health insurance programs.
Kennedy, the son of Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of President John F. Kennedy, is a prominent vaccine skeptic and has earned a formidable following with his views on food, chemicals and immunizations. He took over the anti-vaccine group Children's Health Defense and built it into a juggernaut during the pandemic.
His ascension to HHS secretary has prompted mixed reactions, with all Democrats voting against his nomination, as did Kentucky Sen. Mitch McConnell, who had polio as a child. While recent polling shows that many Americans disagree with some of Kennedy's controversial health stances — including vaccine skepticism and changing guidelines around fluoride in drinking water — some of his other stances, like reformulating processed foods, are broadly popular.
After being sworn in, Kennedy said that he would launch a stronger program to more closely monitor vaccine side effects.
RFK Jr. Questioned on vaccine stanceUS Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) questioned Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. On his stance of vaccines and whether he is anti-vax.
What diseases do the recommended vaccinations protect against?Timeline:
Here's a look at the recommended immunizations by age through age 6, according to the CDC.
The Source: This story was reported based on information regarding the recommended vaccination schedule by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for 2025. It was reported from Cincinnati, and the Associated Press contributed.
Health CareU.S.NewsWhat Experts Say About Childhood Vaccines Amid The Texas Measles Outbreak
Even as Texas grapples with a measles outbreak that has already left one child dead, the childhood vaccination schedule is coming under new scrutiny by the Trump administration. The recommended list of immunizations starting at birth protects kids against more than a dozen deadly diseases from measles to whooping cough.
U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a known vaccine skeptic, included vaccines on his list of things to investigate to see if they have contributed to chronic diseases. And the future of the federal system for weighing the risks and benefits of vaccines in order to make recommendations is in limbo.
Yet health experts overwhelmingly credit vaccines for measles and other preventable diseases as huge public health successes. For instance, before a measles vaccine became available in 1963, nearly all children got the highly contagious disease by the time they turned 15 and about 400 to 500 people in the United States died each year from the disease, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Vaccines have eradicated smallpox and have eliminated polio and other diseases from the United States and many other parts of the world.
The turmoil currently surrounding vaccines and the diseases they are designed to tackle has left many people confused. Science News sat down with two experts to discuss some of the most frequently voiced concerns and questions.
Meet the vaccines expertsAditya Gaur is a pediatric infectious diseases doctor and a clinical researcher at St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital in Memphis. Before coming to the United States in 1996, Gaur worked as a pediatrician in India before vaccines were routinely available. He and colleagues repeatedly treated cases of measles, he says, along with many other vaccine-preventable ailments.
"I saw tetanus in children … and how uncomfortable it was for children, sometimes leading to death," he says. "I saw diphtheria and how the throat looks and how difficult it can get to breathe. I saw those with pneumonia and air leaks in the lungs, and then the children that died. I've seen polio in terms of paralysis." Thanks to vaccines, he hasn't seen a single case of any of those diseases since coming to the United States, he says.
Kawsar Talaat, an infectious diseases doctor and vaccine safety researcher at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, recalls how her father had polio as a child. "He was born before the vaccine was available," she says. "He was paralyzed as a child. He's always had a limp, and then as he got older, he got weaker and weaker and weaker, and now he's in wheelchair… It's a lifelong debilitating illness, even if you survive it."
She has also treated vaccine-preventable diseases. "When I was a resident, we would get waves of children in with dehydration due to rotavirus, and we would dread rotavirus season," she says. Now the waves are more like ripples.
How do vaccines work?Vaccines train the immune system to fight off diseases. When a baby is born, they get some antibodies from their mothers that may give them some protection against certain illnesses for a few months, Gaur says. That's why a new vaccine against respiratory syncytial virus is given during pregnancy to protect newborns.
As the child grows, the immune system learns to combat illness either by getting infected or through immunization. Vaccines may consist of whole weakened or killed pathogens or parts of those organisms, called antigens. The vaccine doesn't cause disease, but it does teach the immune system what invaders to look out for, Gaur says.
Although measles was declared eliminated from the United States in 2000, outbreaks still happen, mostly when infected travelers bring the virus back with them and spread it among unvaccinated people.
As of February 28, at least 146 people in Texas had caught measles in an ongoing outbreak that started in late January. Twenty people have been hospitalized with the highly contagious and dangerous disease, and an unvaccinated school-age child has died. The disease also has been reported in eight other states this year.
From 2002 through 2016, measles hospitalized 1,018 people in the United States. Of those, 34 died; some others had serious complications including kidney failure, brain swelling, pneumonia, blood clots and eye problems, researchers reported in PLOS One in 2020.
In contrast, the side effects from measles vaccines usually consist of a sore arm and sometimes a fever or mild rash. "Yes, a child can see natural measles … and, if they survive, they have good immunity. But there is no upfront way of saying what will be the outcome," Gaur says. "With vaccines, you are controlling that exposure and teaching the immune system how to fight off an infection."
Even more benign infections may have serious consequences that vaccines can prevent, Talaat says. "For most people, chicken pox is mild, but not for everybody. I have seen kids in the hospital with really severe life-threatening bacterial infections that occurred because their skin was disrupted by chicken pox," she says. Kids have lost so much skin, it's as if they were severely burned. "It's happened in children's groins, and so their future fertility and sexual function have been affected."
Vaccines not only protect children but also keep them from spreading disease to people in the community at high risk of complications, Talaat says. And "even if the disease is mild, it still means that that child will miss a week or more of school, and that their parent will miss a week or more of work."
Most of the cases in the Texas outbreak are children who are unvaccinated or have unknown vaccination status. That mirrors previous U.S. Outbreaks: Of 285 reported cases in 2024, nearly 90 percent of those sickened were not vaccinated, CDC data show.
Losing herd immunityIn the 2009–2010 school year, at least 20 states reported that 95 percent or more of their kindergartners were vaccinated against measles, mumps and rubella, according to the CDC. That is the threshold that helps protect people in the community who can't be vaccinated because of weakened immune systems or other medical issues. It essentially erects a wall of vaccinated people between the vulnerable and the measles virus. By the 2023–2024 school year, just 11 states had vaccination rates among kindergartners at or above the 95 percent threshold. Click the arrows to see how MMR vaccination rates among kindergartners has changed between those two school years.
MMR vaccine coverage for U.S. Kindergartners by school yearAcross the United States, vaccination rates have been falling for measles, as well as other childhood diseases. When more than 95 percent of people are vaccinated against measles, there is community or herd immunity that can protect people with weakened immune systems who can't be vaccinated. But measles vaccination rates among kindergartners has fallen from 95.2 percent in the 2019–2020 school year to 92.7 percent in 2023–2024. That left about 280,000 kindergartners vulnerable to measles during the last school year, according to the CDC.
How many deaths and illnesses are prevented by vaccines?Worldwide, vaccination against 14 pathogens saved 154 million lives over the last half century, researchers reported in 2024 in the Lancet. In the United States, routine childhood vaccinations prevented more than 24 million cases of disease in 2019, including about 1,000 cases of tetanus and more than 4.2 million chicken pox cases, researchers reported in Pediatrics in 2022.
Childhood vaccines cover diseases including polio, tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis (whooping cough), measles, mumps, rubella, rotavirus, hepatitis, chicken pox and meningitis. They also cover infections caused by bacteria, including Haemophilus influenzae and Pneumococcal bacteria. All those diseases may cause severe infections that land people in the hospital and can be deadly. Some may have lifelong consequences.
Those are all long-lasting vaccines, some even conveying lifetime protection. In addition, yearly vaccines for flu and COVID-19 are also recommended. About 1.2 million influenza cases in the United States were averted in 2019, an estimated 17 percent reduction from what it would have been without vaccination. COVID-19 vaccines are estimated to have saved at least 14 million lives globally in the first year after they were rolled out, researchers reported in 2022 in the Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health. Immunizations against human papilloma virus to prevent cervical, head, throat and other cancers are recommended for older children. Cervical cancer rates have plummeted for young women vaccinated against HPV.
Downward trendVaccination rates for kindergartners in the United States have fallen in recent years. During the 2023–2024 school year, just 92.3 percent of kindergartners were vaccinated against diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTaP) and 92.7 percent were protected from measles, mumps and rubella (MMR). Varicella (chicken pox), polio and hepatitis B vaccination rates have also dropped in recent years.
The ability to add new vaccines or update existing ones, such as the flu and COVID vaccines has been jeopardized by the Trump administration's withdrawal from the World Health Organization and cancellation of important meetings of committees that advise the CDC and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration about vaccines. Among other considerations, nixing those meetings may threaten the United States' ability to get updated flu vaccines for the next flu season.
"This decision — and other federal efforts to undermine well-established science about vaccine safety — puts everyone at risk, especially when we are currently experiencing the worst U.S. Flu season in more than a decade," Tina Tan, president of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, said in a statement.
The CDC estimates that at least 33 million people have gotten the flu so far this season. An estimated 430,000 people have been hospitalized and 19,000 have died, making this the first high severity flu season since the 2017–2018 season.
How did the childhood vaccine schedule come about?"It happened very gradually over time," Talaat says. Advisers for the CDC and FDA carefully weigh the benefits and risks of each vaccine against the harms caused by infections and recommend whether to add a shot to the schedule and when to give it.
"Once we started making vaccines, children were a natural target because they were the most susceptible to a lot of these infections," Talaat says. For instance, rotavirus infections produce diarrhea that can easily dehydrate young children and land them in the hospital, she says. That vaccine is given when babies are 2 months old.
Pertussis vaccines are also among the earliest given because "the younger the baby, the more susceptible they are to [whooping cough]," Talaat says. "Their airways are so small that they're more likely to die from it."
With measles vaccines, Talaat says, "there's a sweet spot when you want to get the vaccine into kids to protect them, but you don't want to give it too early," because antibodies passed from the mother to the baby can interfere with the vaccine. So the measles, mumps and rubella shot is typically first given when infants are 12- to 15-months old.
Vaccines that protect against HPV and meningococcal disease aren't given until kids are preteens or teenagers because they are at higher risk of infection during the teen or young adult years.
Is it safe for children to get many vaccines at once?Yes. Many childhood vaccines protect against multiple diseases in a single shot, such as one that combines polio, diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis, hepatitis B and Haemophilus influenzae type b. Another guards against up to 20 strains of Pneumococcal bacteria. So a 2-month-old might get a couple of shots with protection against more than two dozen pathogens, along with a drink containing the rotavirus vaccine.
"We have done studies that show that giving these vaccines together is safe and that the immune responses to the vaccines aren't damaged," Talaat says.
"We are exposed to lots of things every day in our environment. Our bodies and our immune systems are built to handle that," she says. "And when we get multiple vaccines and multiple antigens at the same time our bodies can handle that, too."
She adds that "the reason we give kids a bunch of vaccines all at once is to make sure that they get them." It's hard on families to keep bringing their children back to the doctor to get their shots, she says.
What are the side effects or possible harms from vaccines?Sore arms are common since most vaccines are given as shots. "Anything which is injectable may cause an immediate owie, and then may cause some swelling and tenderness," Gaur says. Depending on the vaccine, mild side effects might also include short-lived fever, fatigue, muscle or joint pain and maybe a rash.
Some people develop rare severe side effects such as allergic reactions. Certain groups have a higher risk of that. For instance, adolescent and young adult males are more likely than other people to develop myocarditis and pericarditis — inflammation of the heart or the sac around the heart — after a COVID-19 vaccine. But getting a COVID-19 infection is more likely to cause those heart problems than the vaccine, and the vaccine can prevent severe disease and hospitalization, so regulators calculate that benefits of vaccination outweigh the low risks.
How are vaccines tested?Vaccines go through many years of development in lab and animal tests before they are tested in people. Clinical trials in people happen in multiple phases.
First, vaccines — like any treatment — are tested in small numbers of people for safety. Usually this involves giving some people in the trial the vaccine while others get a placebo. That's necessary, Gaur says, because "things happen to humans, as in, we may get headaches, we may get fevers." The placebo helps sort out which symptoms come from the vaccines.
Additional phases of clinical trials test vaccines in increasingly larger groups of people to look for rare side effects and to determine how well the vaccines prevent disease. New vaccines are tested against placebos in those stages as well. But if there is an existing vaccine, it would not be ethical to leave people unprotected by giving them a placebo, Gaur and Talaat say. Instead, potential vaccines would go head-to-head with existing ones to show that they work at least as well if not better than what is already available.
Unlike medications and therapies, which are usually given to sick people to keep them from getting sicker, vaccines are given to healthy people. That means that side effects associated with other treatments would never be tolerated for vaccines. Says Talaat: "Vaccines pass a higher bar than most treatments."
RFK Jr. Has Long History Of Spreading False Or Misleading Vaccine Claims
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Robert F. Kennedy Jr, the newly confirmed health secretary for the Trump administration who has called for sweeping policy changes, has made numerous false and misleading claims about vaccine safety. Kennedy has amplified conspiracy theories from a resurgent anti-vaccine movement, rejecting scientific evidence on shots that have saved millions of lives and reduced or eradicated many diseases.Kennedy was confirmed February 13, 2025 in a 52-48 Senate vote after heated debate over his position on vaccines.
The son of a former US senator and nephew of former president John F. Kennedy has spread debunked claims linking vaccines to autism and led an activist group that amplified multiple false claims about Covid-19 vaccines.
Following his confirmation, Kennedy said he was "not going to take away anyone's vaccine," while also asserting: "We lack comprehensive safety studies on nearly all vaccines."
Kennedy has dismissed critics who say he is anti-vaccine, claiming his views were mischaracterized and insisting he was advocating for "common sense" policies.
"Vaccines should be tested, they should be safe, everyone should have informed consent," he said.
Kennedy has been previously quoted as warning of a vaccine-linked "holocaust" and his nonprofit Children's Health Defense group raised millions of dollars as it spread misinformation about Covid-19 and other vaccines.
A nurse prepares the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine at the Rockland County Health Department in Haverstraw, Rockland County, New York in 2019Johannes EISELEAFP
Johannes EISELE / AFP Context on vaccine safetyNonetheless, numerous studies and scientific experts point to the life-saving properties of vaccines, suggesting Kennedy's comments are largely false or misleading.
A 2024 study in The Lancet (archived here) concluded that routine vaccinations over the past 50 years had saved 154 million lives, mostly infants and other young children. Global health officials cite sharp reductions in outbreaks and deaths from measles, polio and other pathogens due to vaccination.
Despite Kennedy's claims, vaccines undergo an extensive process for testing and approval in the United States through the Food and Drug Administration and its Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research.
This requires clinical trials and reviews by scientific expert panels. Vaccine safety remains subject to ongoing review after they are approved.
Screenshot from the FDA website taken February 26, 2025
"Vaccines undergo some of the most stringent testing of any medical intervention before approval, and pediatric vaccines are tested specifically for safety and effectiveness in children before being recommended," said David Higgins, a researcher and professor of medicine at the University of Colorado (archived here).
"Before testing in humans, vaccines are studied in laboratory and animal models to assess their potential safety and effectiveness."
Higgins noted that vaccines for children "go through the same rigorous process but with additional considerations, such as dosing adjustments to determine the safest and most effective dose for different age groups."
The approval process (archived here) includes numerous steps starting with a small group of generally fewer than 100 people, followed by a larger clinical trial to evaluate safety, effectiveness and dosages.
After a vaccine is approved, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), which includes medical and public health experts, decides on whether it should be included in the recommended vaccine calendar archived here. But a February meeting of this panel was postponed following Kennedy's confirmation.
Even after approval, the FDA monitors all batches of vaccines to ensure they are working as intended (archived here).
The ACIP evaluates vaccines based on a number of criteria, such as safety and effectiveness, estimating how preventable the disease is and how many people would likely be affected if there were no vaccine. It uses a handbook known as "GRADE" (Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation) in this process (archived here).
Following the ACIP recommendation, the Centers for Disease Control made a final decision on recommendations for who should receive the vaccine.
There have been cases where authorities have withdrawn vaccines, notably a rotavirus vaccine RotaShield in 1999 after it was linked to cases of bowel obstruction (archived here).
Higgins said that contrary to claims from Kennedy and vaccine critics, vaccines "are tested and monitored just as rigorously if not more than FDA-approved drugs and medications and significantly more than many of the over-the-counter medications and supplements people frequently use."
CDC maintains a list (archived here) of vaccines approved in the United States and all research associated with them and a page on possible side effects (archived here), which most frequently are short-term swelling or soreness at the injection site, dizziness, as well as some more serious impacts such as allergic reactions.
"Any vaccine can cause side effects. For the most part these are minor (for example, a sore arm or low-grade fever) and go away within a few days," the website says.
A bandage is placed on the arm of a 12-year-old child after receiving a first dose of the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine on May 14, 2021 in Los Angeles, CaliforniaPatrick T. FALLONAFP
Patrick T. FALLON / AFP Placebo trialsKennedy and others have voiced concerns that many childhood vaccines have not been subject to placebo-controlled trials where participants are given either the active vaccine or an inert ingredient. These claims lack context -- US and global health authorities have long debated ethical considerations of such tests.
Higgins notes that some but not all vaccines for children have gone through placebo-controlled trials.
"There are times when a placebo-controlled trial is not done because it would be unethical," he said, adding that such experiments could "withhold a life-saving vaccine from children, putting them at significant risk for serious and potentially fatal diseases."
Guidelines from the National Institutes of Health (archived here) say it may be ethical to use placebos when there is no known safe and effective vaccine available; but that it is "clearly unacceptable" to subject participants to the risks of delaying or foregoing a vaccine that could prevent a harmful disease.
The World Health Organization offers similar guidelines, noting that "the use of placebos in these situations may arguably violate fundamental ethical principles because randomization to a placebo arm deprives research participants of an effective vaccine... And placebo use may appear to take unfair advantage of the poverty and vulnerability of participants."
Paul Offit, a professor of pediatrics at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, pointed to the well-known experiments for the polio vaccine in the 1950s using a placebo over the objections of inventor Jonas Salk.
"How did we know that Jonas Salk's polio vaccine was effective?" Offit asked in a blog post.
"We knew because 16 children died from polio in that study -- all in the placebo group. We knew because 34 of the 36 children paralyzed by polio in that study were in the placebo group. These are the gentle heroes we leave behind."
More of AFP's reporting on vaccine misinformation is available here.
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