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The Immunizations Your Children Need
Vidcast: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUmK4-4jnPW/
The American Academy of Pediatrics has released its Recommended Childhood and Adolescent Immunization Schedule for 2026. The serecommendations reaffirm the longstanding routine vaccinations necessary to protect children and teens against serious illness.
This academy represents the pediatricians who, along with pediatric nurse practitioners, registered nurses, and all professionals on your child’s medical team, are responsible for keeping your children healthy. They are the ones who delight in watching your children grow and mature. But… they are also the ones who must shepherd you and your children through illnesses, both mild and serious. And, god forbid, they are the ones to deliver the worst news a parent ever has to hear and then grieve with you
The AAP leaders say the 2026 schedule is largely unchanged from last year’s guidance and continues to reflect longstanding scientific evidence. It does differ from a recently issued CDC schedule, which the Academy emphasizes departs from established medical evidence and does not offer optimal protection for children.
The recommended vaccines protect against the 18 most serious childhood diseases and I am going to review the list ranked according to severity and risk to your child’s life.
Tier 1 diseases are most severe with possible catastrophic consequences: measles, diphtheria, tetanus, polio, pneumococcal infections.
Tier 2 diseases are very high risk and life-threatening for infants and children: hemophilus influenza type B or HiB, pertussis or whooping cough, meningococcal infections, respiratory syncytial virus or RSV.
Tier 3 diseases are moderate to high severity: influenza, CoVid, hepatitis B, hepatitis A.
Tier 4 diseases have lower mortality but create significant harm: varicella or chickenpox, rubella or German measles, mumps.
Tier 5 diseases include those lowest risk to life but still dangerous: rotavirus, human papilloma virus or HPV.
The American Academy of Pediatrics emphasizes that routine childhood immunizations are a critical early step toward lifelong health and that pediatricians welcome open conversations with families about vaccines. The AAP Committee on Infectious Diseases adds that vaccines are carefully tested, monitored over time, and scheduled to match how a child’s immune system develops.
The message for parents is simple: vaccines work, they’re safe, they save lives, and every child should receive all those recommended.
https://www.aap.org/en/news-room/news-releases/aap/2025/american-academy-of-pediatric-issues-recommended-childhood-and-adolescent-immunization-schedule-for-2026/
#immunizations #children #pediatrics #publichealth
immunizations, children, pediatrics, publichealth
By Howard G. Smith MD, AMThe Immunizations Your Children Need
Vidcast: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUmK4-4jnPW/
The American Academy of Pediatrics has released its Recommended Childhood and Adolescent Immunization Schedule for 2026. The serecommendations reaffirm the longstanding routine vaccinations necessary to protect children and teens against serious illness.
This academy represents the pediatricians who, along with pediatric nurse practitioners, registered nurses, and all professionals on your child’s medical team, are responsible for keeping your children healthy. They are the ones who delight in watching your children grow and mature. But… they are also the ones who must shepherd you and your children through illnesses, both mild and serious. And, god forbid, they are the ones to deliver the worst news a parent ever has to hear and then grieve with you
The AAP leaders say the 2026 schedule is largely unchanged from last year’s guidance and continues to reflect longstanding scientific evidence. It does differ from a recently issued CDC schedule, which the Academy emphasizes departs from established medical evidence and does not offer optimal protection for children.
The recommended vaccines protect against the 18 most serious childhood diseases and I am going to review the list ranked according to severity and risk to your child’s life.
Tier 1 diseases are most severe with possible catastrophic consequences: measles, diphtheria, tetanus, polio, pneumococcal infections.
Tier 2 diseases are very high risk and life-threatening for infants and children: hemophilus influenza type B or HiB, pertussis or whooping cough, meningococcal infections, respiratory syncytial virus or RSV.
Tier 3 diseases are moderate to high severity: influenza, CoVid, hepatitis B, hepatitis A.
Tier 4 diseases have lower mortality but create significant harm: varicella or chickenpox, rubella or German measles, mumps.
Tier 5 diseases include those lowest risk to life but still dangerous: rotavirus, human papilloma virus or HPV.
The American Academy of Pediatrics emphasizes that routine childhood immunizations are a critical early step toward lifelong health and that pediatricians welcome open conversations with families about vaccines. The AAP Committee on Infectious Diseases adds that vaccines are carefully tested, monitored over time, and scheduled to match how a child’s immune system develops.
The message for parents is simple: vaccines work, they’re safe, they save lives, and every child should receive all those recommended.
https://www.aap.org/en/news-room/news-releases/aap/2025/american-academy-of-pediatric-issues-recommended-childhood-and-adolescent-immunization-schedule-for-2026/
#immunizations #children #pediatrics #publichealth
immunizations, children, pediatrics, publichealth