When Childhood Vaccines Become a Personal Choice, Public Health Pays the Price
the importance of childhood immunization and public health
Editor Notes

I wrote this as both a public health advocate and a mom to an 18-month old who is deeply concerned about recent changes to the U.S. childhood immunization recommendations. Vaccine policy decisions shape the world our children grow up in, and clarity mattersโ€”especially when the science is settled and the consequences are real and sometimes deadly.

Taylarr Lopez, Health Communications Director, NMQF

Childhood vaccines are one of those public health wins that work so well, weโ€™ve almost forgotten what life was like before them. Well, allow me to remind you. Picture it. 1952. The peak of the 1950’s polio outbreak that sickened approximately 57,000 Americans and resulted in nearly 20,000 cases of paralysis and 3,000 deaths. Polio paralyzed tens of thousands of children each yearโ€”until it didnโ€™t. Measles once sent millions of children to the hospitalโ€”until it largely disappeared. Smallpox? Gone.

 

Thatโ€™s why recent changes to childhood vaccine recommendations under Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (who by the way, has no medical degree nor medical training) should concern every parent, provider, and policymaker who cares about childrenโ€™s healthโ€”not to mention the collective progress weโ€™ve made as a nation.

 

The new guidance signals a departure from a long-standing, evidence-based childhood immunization policy. Instead of reinforcing routine vaccination as the default standard of care, the updated recommendations emphasize โ€œparental choice,โ€ elevate individual discretion over population-level protection, and suggest aligning U.S. vaccine policy more closely with countries like Denmark, which uses a more limited routine childhood schedule.ย 

 

Now youโ€™re probably wondering, โ€œWhy does Denmark have fewer routine childhood vaccines?โ€ Denmark has universal healthcare, minimal child poverty, strong social safety nets, and very high trust in government institutions. Meanwhile, the U.S. has none of those things consistently. You cannot borrow one policy from another country without borrowing the conditions that make it work.ย 

 

The U.S. childhood immunization schedule isnโ€™t a guess. Itโ€™s a carefully engineered system built over decades using clinical trials, real-world data, continuous and vigorous safety monitoring, and regular review byโ€”you guessed itโ€”independent credentialed experts.

 

Every recommended vaccine earns its place based on the disease severity, transmission risk, safety profile, and long-term benefit. This is not a โ€œthrow everything at kidsโ€ approach. Itโ€™s a โ€œprevent the worst outcomes as early and safely as possibleโ€ strategy.

 

I probably donโ€™t have to tell you that infants encounter far more immune challenges from crawling on the floor and licking the remote than from the entire vaccine schedule. Modern vaccines are actually more refined and targeted than those used decades ago.

 

And noโ€”despite years of searchingโ€”vaccines do not cause autism. What they do cause is fewer funerals, fewer hospital stays, fewer out of pocket medical costs, and fewer parents learning the hard way why prevention matters.

 

The previous recommendations succeeded because they were clear, consistent, and rooted in shared responsibility. When vaccination is framed as optional or negotiable, uptake drops. When uptake drops, outbreaks rise.

 

Case in point: the United States is currently experiencing a measles resurgenceโ€”a disease we declared eliminated in 2000. Measles is not a harmless childhood inconvenience. It is one of the most contagious viruses on Earth and can cause pneumonia, brain inflammation, permanent disability, and death. I donโ€™t know about the rest of you but the thought of my toddler experiencing any of the aforementioned afflictions makes me shiver. By the way, this isnโ€™t fear-mongering. Itโ€™s epidemiology.

 

Unfortunately, this isnโ€™t the first time that RFK Jr.โ€™s vaccine skepticism resulted in devastating outcomes. His public opposition to the measles vaccine played a documented role in declining vaccination rates in Samoa before a devastating 2019 outbreak that killed dozens of children.ย 

 

Public health doesnโ€™t forget outcomes like thatโ€”not because we enjoy being right, but because children pay the price when misinformation wins.

 

Long story short, the human race cannot and will not survive on just sea moss and vibes. Vaccines are not just shots. They are one of humanityโ€™s greatest public health achievementsโ€”right up there with clean water and sanitation. Theyโ€™ve added decades to life expectancy, prevented disability, and allowed parents to raise children without fearing diseases that once haunted every household.

 

My mom used to say that some people have to touch the stove to realize itโ€™s hot. Unfortunately, when it comes to vaccines, โ€œlearning the hard wayโ€ means outbreaks, hospitalizations, and preventable deathsโ€”hardly the kind of lesson plan we should be assigning children.

 

Stay Informed. Stay Empowered.

 

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