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CDC Keeps COVID-19 Vaccines for Children Under Shared Clinical Decision-Making

By shifting to a shared clinical decision-making recommendation, the CDC keeps child COVID-19 shots on the schedule with insurer liability intact despite the health secretary’s earlier removal assertion.

Overview

  • On May 29, the CDC updated its childhood immunization schedule to state that children 6 months through 17 years “may receive” COVID-19 vaccines based on clinician judgment and parental preference instead of a universal recommendation.
  • Under the shared decision-making category, insurers must fully cover COVID-19 shots for eligible children with no out-of-pocket costs, preserving access despite the change in language.
  • The CDC’s website still endorses COVID-19 vaccination for pregnant women, directly contradicting HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s May 27 claim to remove that group from the recommended schedule.
  • Experts including the American Academy of Pediatrics criticized Kennedy’s announcement for bypassing the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices and undermining public confidence in vaccine policy.
  • Low uptake remains a concern, with just 13% of children and 23% of adults up to date on the 2024-25 COVID-19 vaccine, and officials warn permissive guidance could further depress rates.