What to Know from the Latest ACIP Meeting: Hepatitis B Vaccine Review Raises Access Concerns
The CDCโ€™s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices is evaluating early-life Hepatitis B vaccination. Hereโ€™s what we know so far, and why potential changes matter for communities of color.

The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) began its December meeting this week with a closely watched review of several routine childhood vaccines, including renewed attention on the timing of the Hepatitis B vaccine for infants. The two-day meeting, held December 4โ€“5 and streamed live by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has drawn heightened public interest because of its potential to influence longstanding national immunization policy. The webcast remains available through the CDC at https://www.cdc.gov/acip/meetings/index.html.

According to ACIPโ€™s published agenda, the committee is reviewing whether new evidence or clinical practice patterns should affect how the Hepatitis B vaccine is introduced in early life. The current recommendation, in place since 1991, advises that all newborns receive a dose of the vaccine within 24 hours of birth, followed by completion of the vaccine series during infancy. CDC research has shown that universal newborn vaccination significantly reduced early-life hepatitis B virus (HBV) infections over the past three decades, particularly in communities that previously experienced high rates of undiagnosed maternal HBV infection or limited access to consistent pediatric care. Public health groups describe the birth dose as a backstop for infants who may otherwise miss preventive care or whose parents may not know their HBV status.

So far, the committeeโ€™s discussions reflect tensions between risk-based and universal vaccination approaches. Media outlets covering the meeting have reported that some panelists raised questions about whether the birth dose should continue as a blanket recommendation for all infants, while others expressed concern that altering the policy could introduce gaps in protection. These reports emphasize that ACIP has not yet taken any final action. A spokesperson referenced in news coverage described the deliberations as ongoing, with additional analysis needed before any vote would occur. No official proposal has been released that would remove or replace the universal newborn recommendation, and no updated schedule has been approved by the CDC.

Several medical organizations submitted comments to ACIP ahead of the meeting, urging caution regarding any change to the infant HepB schedule. A letter from infectious disease experts, posted publicly by the Infectious Diseases Society of America, reiterated that hepatitis B remains a serious threat for infants exposed at birth or in the first months of life, noting that most chronic infections originate during early childhood. The authors warned that removing a universal birth dose could result in missed prevention opportunities, especially in hospital systems with uneven maternal screening rates. They cited CDC data showing that chronic HBV infection disproportionately affects Asian American, Pacific Islander, African immigrant, and other historically underserved communities. In these groups, gaps in screening and delayed vaccination can magnify lifelong risks of liver cancer and other HBV-related illnesses.

Equity considerations have also been a recurring theme in the broader public discussion surrounding ACIPโ€™s review. Community health leaders point out that many families of color rely on the hospital birth setting as their most reliable point of access to preventive services. For parents working multiple jobs, lacking transportation, or living in areas without consistent pediatric care, delaying the first HepB dose until later well-child visits raises the possibility of missed protection. Advocates stress that universal vaccination at birth helps close these access gaps by ensuring that every newborn, regardless of insurance status, immigration background, or the ability to return for scheduled visits, begins life with critical preventive coverage.

ACIPโ€™s December meeting comes during a period of sustained national attention on immunization policy. Vaccination rates declined during the COVID-19 pandemic, and many public health departments continue working to rebuild trust and reconnect families with routine care. For hepatitis B specifically, the CDC continues to encourage vaccination not only for infants, but for unvaccinated adults up to age 59 and older adults with risk factors. Expanding adult vaccination has also been identified as an important strategy to reduce HBV transmission in communities that face systemic barriers to healthcare access.

As of today, ACIP has not issued any new recommendations related to HepB vaccination, and the CDC has not updated the childhood immunization schedule. Any future action will require a formal vote, followed by review and approval from the CDC director before becoming national policy. Until then, the existing universal birth-dose recommendation remains in place.

Public health officials, clinicians, and community organizations serving diverse and underserved populations are expected to continue monitoring developments closely. Changes to early-life vaccination policy carry significant implications not only for individual families but for the broader effort to protect communities from vaccine-preventable diseases. As ACIP prepares its next steps, the outcome of this review will help shape how the nation approaches hepatitis B prevention at a time when health equity remains a central concern for many Americans.

Stay Informed. Stay Empowered.

Trending Topics

Features

Download and distribute powerful vaccination QI resources for your community.

Sign up now to support health equity and sustainable health outcomes in your community.

MCED tests use a simple blood draw to screen for many kinds of cancer at once.

FYHN is a bridge connecting health information providers to BIPOC communities in a trusted environment.

Discover an honest look at our Medicare system.

ARC was launched to create a network of community clinicians to diversify and bring clinical trials to communities of color and other communities that have been underrepresented.

The single most important purpose of our healthcare system is to reduce patient risk for an acute event.

Related Posts
2026 Measles Spike: U.S. Cases Rise Fast as Outbreaks Grow
On Rare Disease Day, Black History Reminds Us: โ€œRareโ€ Should Never Mean Invisible
Protecting Our Communities Through Food Safety Reporting
Scroll to Top
Featured Articles
U.S. measles cases 2026: Outbreaks Spread as MMR Coverage
2026 Measles Spike: U.S. Cases Rise Fast as Outbreaks Grow
On Rare Disease Day, Black History Reminds Us: โ€œRareโ€ Should Never Mean Invisible
On Rare Disease Day, Black History Reminds Us: โ€œRareโ€ Should Never Mean Invis...
This image displays the USDA inspection shield and the establishment number on a food package. Federal investigators require these specific details to process a formal complaint regarding meat or poultry products
Protecting Our Communities Through Food Safety Reporting
Alysa Liuโ€™s Comeback Puts a Spotlight on Mental Health and Healing in Communities of Color
Alysa Liuโ€™s Comeback Puts a Spotlight on Mental Health and Healing in Communi...
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas alongside the URAC Health Equity Accreditation seal, marking the first time a health plan has received this national honor for addressing healthcare disparities
Blue Cross-Blue Shield of Kansas Earns Nationโ€™s First Health Equity Accredita...
Novo Nordisk to Cut Wegovy, Ozempic, Rybelsus Prices
Lower Prices for Wegovy and Ozempic โ€” Will You Pay Less?
Categories
AI
BIPOC News
Cancer
Clinical Trials
Covid19
Diseases of the Body
Environment
Health Data
Health Equity Events
Health Policy
Heart Health
kidney Health
Subscribe to our newsletter to receive our latest newsโ€‹
All Stories
U.S. measles cases 2026: Outbreaks Spread as MMR Coverage
2026 Measles Spike: U.S. Cases Rise Fast as Outbreaks Grow
On Rare Disease Day, Black History Reminds Us: โ€œRareโ€ Should Never Mean Invisible
On Rare Disease Day, Black History Reminds Us: โ€œRareโ€ Should Never Mean Invis...
This image displays the USDA inspection shield and the establishment number on a food package. Federal investigators require these specific details to process a formal complaint regarding meat or poultry products
Protecting Our Communities Through Food Safety Reporting
BIPOC News
On Rare Disease Day, Black History Reminds Us: โ€œRareโ€ Should Never Mean Invisible
On Rare Disease Day, Black History Reminds Us: โ€œRareโ€ Should Never Mean Invis...
This image displays the USDA inspection shield and the establishment number on a food package. Federal investigators require these specific details to process a formal complaint regarding meat or poultry products
Protecting Our Communities Through Food Safety Reporting
Alysa Liuโ€™s Comeback Puts a Spotlight on Mental Health and Healing in Communities of Color
Alysa Liuโ€™s Comeback Puts a Spotlight on Mental Health and Healing in Communi...
Environment
Public health scientist collecting wastewater sample to test for viral concentrations as part of community disease surveillance in the United States.
What Wastewater Testing Reveals About Viruses Spreading in Your Community
Image20260129104343
NMQFโ€™s Role in Helping Flint Reclaim Its Health Future
Nearly a decade after the Flint water crisis health impacts became a national warning about government failure, many Flint residents say they are still living with the consequences. Sen. Elissa Slotkin told the U.S. Senate this month that families continue to report health problems and long-term disruption as court cases and settlements continue Sen. Elissa Slotkin took to the U.S. Senate floor last week to deliver a message Flint residents have been repeating for nearly a decade: the crisis may no longer dominate headlines, but the harm has not ended. โ€œAn American city was poisoned,โ€ Slotkin said, describing families who reported discolored water, rashes, seizures, hair loss, and chronic health problems as officials insisted the tap water was safe. The Flint water crisis began in April 2014, when the city switched its water source to the Flint River without adding corrosion-control treatment, a safeguard that helps prevent lead from leaching out of aging pipes. Public health officials later warned that tens of thousands of residents were exposed to elevated lead levels, and President Barack Obama declared a federal emergency in January 2016. Health officials say families concerned about lead exposure should follow clinical guidance on testing and follow-up care from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Flint is a majority-Black city with high poverty rates, and the crisis quickly became a national symbol of how infrastructure failures and government neglect can compound longstanding racial and economic inequities. Lead exposure is especially dangerous for children. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has warned that lead can damage childrenโ€™s brains and nervous systems and contribute to learning and behavioral problemsโ€”harms that can be irreversible. Research examining pediatric blood lead testing patterns in Flint underscores how the crisis altered health behavior and monitoring, even years after the worst contamination became public. The long road to accountability, including the courtroom While the physical infrastructure is improving, Flintโ€™s search for accountability has played out in courtrooms for years. In a highly watched civil โ€œbellwetherโ€ trial in 2022, jurors could not reach a verdict in a case involving engineering firms accused of failing to prevent or mitigate the crisis, leading a judge to declare a mistrial. Since then, major civil settlements have continued to reshape what โ€œjusticeโ€ looks like for many familiesโ€”often less about a single guilty verdict than about whether compensation and long-promised services actually reach affected residents. In February 2025, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced a $53 million civil settlement with Veolia North America tied to allegations that the companyโ€™s work contributed to prolonging the crisis; the settlement was described as a way to provide closure after years of litigation. The settlement added to earlier agreements, including the stateโ€™s broader $626 million class-action settlement framework meant to compensate people harmed by lead exposure. A court-supervised claims process has approved tens of thousands of claims, but residents have faced long waits as payments move from approval to distribution. The criminal cases tied to the crisis, meanwhile, largely collapsed. A Michigan judge formally dismissed misdemeanor charges against former Gov. Rick Snyder in 2023 after appellate rulings ended the prosecutions, effectively closing that chapter of the legal response. For many Flint families, that outcome deepened the sense that high-level decision-makers escaped meaningful consequences. Health and education impacts also remain a pressing concern. A New York Times report in 2019 described Flint schools struggling with rising needs for individualized education plans and behavioral supports for children who were exposed to leadโ€”needs that educators and parents say require sustained resources, not short-term attention. Separate academic work has linked the crisis to measurable setbacks in educational outcomes, adding to evidence that environmental disasters can shape childrenโ€™s trajectories long after the immediate emergency fades. There has been visible progress on the cityโ€™s pipes. Michigan reported in 2025 that Flint had completed replacement of nearly 11,000 lead water service lines under a legal settlement that required free replacement offers to residents, a milestone that public health leaders framed as nationally significant. Pediatrician Mona Hannaโ€”one of the early voices warning the public about the crisisโ€”told The Washington Post that when water runs through lead pipes, it is โ€œflowing through a straw that is a poison and has no safe level.โ€ Still, Slotkinโ€™s Senate speech captured what many residents say is the unresolved heart of the crisis: trust. She pointed to families who felt dismissed when they first complained, and she said Flint residents are still seeking justiceโ€”including through legal action involving federal regulatorsโ€”while living with the long-term health, educational, and economic consequences of a disaster they did not cause. As Flint marks another year since the emergency declaration, the question for public health and policy leaders is not only how to prevent another Flint, but how to support a community living with the aftershocksโ€”through healthcare access, developmental and educational services, and timely delivery of promised compensationโ€”so that recovery is more than a milestone on paper. Also Read: A New Year, A Fresh Start for Health fyh.news
Flintโ€™s Water Crisis Isnโ€™t Over: Health Effects Persist as Trials and Settlem...
Work Force
dreamstime_s_243253251
The Caregiver Journey: The Hidden Backbone of American Healthcare
Families gather at a Bronx community festival with live music, kidsโ€™ activities, and health booths sharing SOMOS social care resources and free screenings.
Celebrating Hispanic heritage while learning about health care

msn

Racial/Ethnic Minorities have Greater Declines in Sleep Duration with Higher Risk of Cardiometabolic Disease
Racial/Ethnic Minorities have Greater Declines in Sleep Duration with Higher ...

pubmed

Clinical Trials
The Fight to Protect Black Women from Toxic Hair Products
The Fight to Protect Black Women from Toxic Hair Products
Public health scientist collecting wastewater sample to test for viral concentrations as part of community disease surveillance in the United States.
What Wastewater Testing Reveals About Viruses Spreading in Your Community
Maryland Law Seeks to Expand Obesity Treatment Coverage as Telehealth Weight-Loss Drug Controversy Unfolds
Maryland Law Seeks to Expand Obesity Treatment Coverage as Telehealth Weight-...
Vaccines and Outbreaks
U.S. measles cases 2026: Outbreaks Spread as MMR Coverage
2026 Measles Spike: U.S. Cases Rise Fast as Outbreaks Grow
the importance of childhood immunization and public health
When Childhood Vaccines Become a Personal Choice, Public Health Pays the Price
New Yearโ€™s Eve Safety Tips Driving, Fireworks, CO Risks fyh.news
New Yearโ€™s Eve Safety Tips: Driving, Fireworks, CO Risks
Other Categories
AI
Cancer
Read the latest Cancer stories trending around the world
Covid19
Diseases of the Body
Read about the latest Diseases of the Body trending around the world
Friday Webinars
Every Friday, we bring you insightful webinars covering critical topics in healthcare, data equity, and policy reform.
Health Data
Read the latest Health Data stories trending around the world
Health Equity Events
Read the best Health Equity Events around the country.
Health Policy
Read the latest Health Policy stories trending around the world
Heart Health
Read the latest on Heart Health News, Stories and Tips.
kidney Health
Read more trending News about Kidney Health, Stories and Tips.
LGBTQ Health
Read the latest LGBTQ Health stories trending around the world
Lift Every Voice Patient Network