• Home
  • Politics
  • Health
  • World
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
What's Hot

Is Inter & Co, Inc. (INTR) A Good Stock To Buy Now?

July 5, 2026

Michael Rapaport Explains Why He Stopped Calling Trump ‘D*ck Stain’

July 5, 2026

Report Alleges Environmental Law Institute Partnered with China

July 5, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Sunday, July 5
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
  • Home
  • Politics

    Canada’s World Cup run ends in heartache — but politicos embrace soccer

    July 5, 2026

    Poll: Americans say they’re sick of politics taking over their lives. With exceptions.

    July 4, 2026

    Fox News Host Jesse Watters Slams Gen Z As Lazy, Entitled

    July 4, 2026

    Demonstrators in white supremacist attire protest on Capitol Hill

    July 4, 2026

    It's Canadian soccer's first rodeo

    July 4, 2026
  • Health

    Why Norway Brought In 1,276 Pounds Of Food For The 2026 FIFA World Cup

    July 4, 2026

    9 Ways To Relax Without Alcohol This Summer, From A Doctor

    July 4, 2026

    Busy Philipps On Her ADHD. How Women Can Face Additional Challenges

    July 4, 2026

    Hydration Breaks At 2026 World Cup Raise Controversy For FIFA

    July 3, 2026

    Poop Parasite Causes Hundreds Of Cases Of Explosive Diarrhea

    July 3, 2026
  • World

    Report Alleges Environmental Law Institute Partnered with China

    July 5, 2026

    Dave Chappelle Answers ‘Loaded Question’ About America

    July 5, 2026

    Venezuelan Thug-in-Chief Diosdado Cabello Blocking Earthquake Rescues to Protect Buried Cocaine

    July 5, 2026

    Trump Mixes Patriotism With Partisanship As He Celebrates America’s ‘Joyous’ 250th Anniversary

    July 5, 2026

    Prison Officer Jailed for Sex with Murderer Who Listed Her as ‘Partner’ in Smuggled Cellphone

    July 5, 2026
  • Business

    Companies Find Out AI Robots Can’t Replace All Humans Just Yet

    July 3, 2026

    EXCLUSIVE: New Report Warns Of Foreign Stranglehold On American Beer Market

    July 3, 2026

    Former Tricolor CEO Pleads Not Guilty To Alleged $800 Million Plot Handing Out Car Loans To Illegal Aliens

    July 2, 2026

    Ford Discovers Humans Can’t Be Replaced After All

    June 30, 2026

    Paul Krugman Suddenly Admits Tariffs May Be ‘Necessary’ After Years Of Globalist Dogma

    June 30, 2026
  • Finance

    Is Inter & Co, Inc. (INTR) A Good Stock To Buy Now?

    July 5, 2026

    Is Intellia Therapeutics, Inc. (NTLA) A Good Stock To Buy Now?

    July 5, 2026

    How Reddit, Inc. (RDDT) Is Turning Community Intelligence Into a Stronger Ad Monetization Pitch

    July 5, 2026

    Is The Kraft Heinz Company (KHC) A Good Stock To Buy Now?

    July 5, 2026

    ChatGPT-Maker OpenAI Is Headed for a $1 Trillion IPO. The Biggest Winner Could Be Microsoft Stock.

    July 4, 2026
  • Tech

    Peter Thiel Accuses Pope Leo of Serving as Chinese Communist Agent on AI

    July 4, 2026

    Married Couple Dies in First Fatal Tesla Semi Crash

    July 3, 2026

    Wikipedia Editors Mock, Denigrate Co-Founder Larry Sanger Following Ban

    July 3, 2026

    Google Loses Fight Against EU’s $4.7 Billion Android Fine

    July 3, 2026

    ‘Magnificent 7’ Tech Giants Lost $2.3 Trillion in Value in June as AI Concerns Mount

    July 3, 2026
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
Home»Health»Eliminating hepatitis B shots at birth will have dire consequences, studies project
Health

Eliminating hepatitis B shots at birth will have dire consequences, studies project

May 3, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Eliminating hepatitis B shots at birth will have dire consequences, studies project
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

A new U.S. policy that recommends offering hepatitis B vaccine at birth only to babies perceived to be at risk of neonatal infection will lead to increased numbers of infected infants and more cases of chronic hepatitis B infection in children that will generate millions of extra dollars in health care costs, two studies published Monday project.

“Avoiding an increase in neonatal infections under the targeted recommendation would require historically unattained levels of maternal [hepatitis B] screening or birth-dose coverage among infants of unscreened mothers,” said one of the studies, from researchers at Boston University, the University of Florida, and Johns Hopkins University.

The second, from researchers at Oregon Health and Science University, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, Emory University, and Cornell University, estimated that delaying the first dose of hepatitis B vaccine to two months of age for babies born to mothers who tested negative for the virus could result in an additional 90 infections, 76 chronic infections, and 29 hepatitis B-related deaths annually, with more than $16 million dollars in additional health care costs for each year’s birth cohort. 

The first paper estimated the additional infections annually could range from 69 if 80% of the babies recommended to have a birth dose actually got one to 628 if only 10% of those infants were vaccinated.

The studies, published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics, use mathematical modeling to assess the impact of the controversial new policy, which was approved by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices in early December and adopted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shortly thereafter, despite public health experts’ warnings against the new approach.

Dropping the flu vaccine requirement puts U.S. military readiness at risk

Hepatitis B is a highly infectious virus that is transmitted via bodily fluids. While there is a vaccine to prevent infection, there is no cure. The immune systems of most adults who become infected are able to clear the virus. But babies who are infected have a 90% chance of developing chronic hepatitis B infection, and about a quarter of those who do will die prematurely from liver disease triggered by the infection.

See also  The US AI Diffusion Framework: Global Implications and Unintended Consequences

The ACIP, which health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. stacked with vaccine skeptics last year, voted to replace a decades-old recommendation that all babies be vaccinated at birth against hepatitis B with one that suggests only babies born to mothers who have either tested positive for the virus or who haven’t been screened should be offered the vaccine at birth. It goes on to recommend that parents of babies born to a mother who tested negative during pregnancy could decide whether to vaccinate later, suggesting the first (of three) doses not be given before 2 months of age in these cases.

Many states have declared they will not adopt the recommendation, the status of which is currently uncertain. In mid-March, a federal court judge issued a preliminary ruling in a case challenging the restructuring of the ACIP and subsequent changes to vaccination policy, brought by the AAP and other organizations. Judge Brian E. Murphy ruled that the moves were likely illegal. 

The studies are precisely the type of research that previous iterations of the ACIP would have pored over before making any decision about changing the hepatitis B birth dose recommendation, said Arthur Reingold, a professor of infectious disease epidemiology at the UC Berkeley School of Public Health. But Reingold said there is no indication that the Kennedy-appointed ACIP did anything of the sort. 

He called the studies “very thoughtful analyses.” 

Reingold, who previously served on the ACIP, heartily disagrees with the new policy.

“The fact of the matter is … the hepatitis B birth dose has been given to tens of millions of children in the United States and hundreds of millions around the world. And there’s simply not a shred of evidence that there are any adverse effects or safety concerns,” he said.

In an editorial that accompanied the two studies, Grace Lee, a former chair of the ACIP, noted that the debate about whether to change the recommendation did not consider the harms that would flow from changing the policy, focusing instead on unspecified risks of getting the vaccine.

See also  Might Hepatitis D Virus Cause More Diseases Than Initially Thought?

Lee noted the estimates of the impacts of the policy change generated in the studies were conservative. Among other things, they did not take into consideration the fact that changing the policy because of implied potential harms could drive down parents’ willingness to vaccinate their babies against hepatitis B, and would make administering the program more challenging for birthing hospitals and pediatricians. 

“As health systems and health care professionals are keenly aware, implementation is not about intent, it is about friction,” wrote Lee, an associate dean for maternal and child health at Stanford University School of Medicine. “With enough friction, it becomes easier to not vaccinate than to vaccinate.”

It is unclear how broadly the new recommendation will be put into practice. Whereas professional medical associations such as the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecologists for years worked hand in glove with the ACIP, many organizations— including these two — no longer synchronize their vaccination recommendations with the ones issued by the CDC.

It’s widely believed, however, that the new recommendation will lead to confusion and a lowering of the number of babies who get vaccinated against hepatitis B.

“Lack of a universal birth dose recommendation weakens provider and parent confidence and disrupts long-standing protocols for universal birth dose administration which could cause unscreened mothers and their infants to fall through the cracks,” Noele Nelson, senior author of the second study said in an email.

“Unscreened mothers may lack prenatal care, lack insurance, and have other health barriers causing them to be unscreened which contribute to lack of optimal neonatal care,” said Nelson, a professor of public health at Cornell University.  

Rachel Epstein, senior author of the first study, agreed.

See also  Ebola, hepatitis B, long Covid, Christianity: Morning Rounds

“We know in general in medicine — infectious diseases in particular — that an intervention is more effective if it’s recommended for everyone,” said Epstein, a pediatric and adult infectious disease physician and clinician investigator at Boston Medical Center. “This could be a situation where having to look for the risk and not it being a routine thing might make the vaccination rate lower in those babies.”

Don’t believe headlines saying that vaccine skepticism is widespread

Epstein and her co-authors pointed to data from 1999 to bolster their argument. 

The universal birth dose recommendation went into effect in 1991, leading to a dramatic reduction in the number of babies who contracted hepatitis B during infancy. But in 1999 the AAP recommended pausing the birth dose in babies born to mothers who tested negative for hepatitis B, because of concerns at the time about the vaccine preservative thimerosal. (Multiple studies have since disputed the claim that thimerosal in vaccines was responsible, as once alleged, for an increase in autism rates.)

During the period when the universal birth dose recommendation was paused, the percentage of vaccinated babies born to mothers who had not been screened for hepatitis B fell from 53% to 7% — even though the recommendation to offer the vaccine at birth to those babies had not changed. It rebounded after the universal birth dose recommendation was reinstated.

Currently about 86% of pregnant people are tested for hepatitis B. The new ACIP policy recommends that the babies of those mothers who were not tested should still be given a birth dose, but given the earlier experience, Epstein and her co-authors warn that “even modest declines in birth-dose coverage among this group may meaningfully increase neonatal infections.”

Lee’s editorial noted that even prior to the change in policy, the percentage of babies who receive hepatitis B birth doses has been declining, dropping to 73.2% last August from 83.5% in February 2023.

Birth Consequences Dire Eliminating hepatitis Project shots studies
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Why Norway Brought In 1,276 Pounds Of Food For The 2026 FIFA World Cup

July 4, 2026

9 Ways To Relax Without Alcohol This Summer, From A Doctor

July 4, 2026

Busy Philipps On Her ADHD. How Women Can Face Additional Challenges

July 4, 2026

Hydration Breaks At 2026 World Cup Raise Controversy For FIFA

July 3, 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Feds: National Debt Will be Nearly Twice As Large As U.S. Economy in 30 Years

June 30, 2023

South Walton Baseball Uses Rare Suicide Squeeze To Win Florida High School State Championship In Walk-Off Fashion

May 17, 2026

Michael Imperioli Forbids Homophobes From Watching ‘Sopranos’

July 2, 2023

The Nuface Trinity+ Kit Is 15% Off on QVC

November 7, 2023
Don't Miss

Is Inter & Co, Inc. (INTR) A Good Stock To Buy Now?

Finance July 5, 2026

Is INTR a good stock to buy? We came across a bullish thesis on Inter & Co,…

Michael Rapaport Explains Why He Stopped Calling Trump ‘D*ck Stain’

July 5, 2026

Report Alleges Environmental Law Institute Partnered with China

July 5, 2026

Taylor Swift’s Wedding Secrets Include Strict Guest NDAs

July 5, 2026
About
About

This is your World, Tech, Health, Entertainment and Sports website. We provide the latest breaking news straight from the News industry.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
Categories
  • Business (4,393)
  • Entertainment (5,495)
  • Finance (4,061)
  • Health (2,404)
  • Lifestyle (1,896)
  • Politics (3,785)
  • Sports (4,761)
  • Tech (2,343)
  • Uncategorized (4)
  • World (5,441)
Our Picks

Bill Maher Says Artists Pulling Out Of ‘America 250’ Makes It Look Like Democrats ‘Don’t Really Love America’

June 7, 2026

Radical Socialists Have Taken A Play Straight From Trump Campaign’s Playbook

July 3, 2026

Oil set for third weekly decline as demand worries weigh

November 10, 2023
Popular Posts

Is Inter & Co, Inc. (INTR) A Good Stock To Buy Now?

July 5, 2026

Michael Rapaport Explains Why He Stopped Calling Trump ‘D*ck Stain’

July 5, 2026

Report Alleges Environmental Law Institute Partnered with China

July 5, 2026
© 2026 Patriotnownews.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.