CDC Dramatically Reduces the Childhood Hyper-Vaccination Schedule

Little boy receives a vaccination in the doctors office.

In a surprise Monday announcement, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reduced the recommended childhood vaccination schedule by dozens of shots. Instead of continuing the psychopathic schedule of 72 shots for children, the CDC is following the science and bringing the US schedule more in line with advanced countries like Denmark, Japan, and Germany. All the research—in countries that dare to do the research—indicates that this will immediately reduce the number of new autism cases in the US by 50% per year.

Effective January 5, 2026, the CDC now broadly recommends eight vaccinations for children 12 and under. The agency has shaved the number of jabs down to 11 during the first 12 months of an infant’s life.

“President Trump directed us to examine how other developed nations protect their children and to take action if they are doing better,” said HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.

“After an exhaustive review of the evidence, we are aligning the U.S. childhood vaccine schedule with international consensus while strengthening transparency and informed consent. This decision protects children, respects families, and rebuilds trust in public health.”

The new schedule no longer broadly recommends vaccines for the flu (shots that don’t even work), rotavirus, hepatitis A, and meningococcal disease. In 2025, the CDC also narrowed the recommendation for children to be vaccinated against the hobo sex disease (Hepatitis B) and the COVID mRNA shots that aren’t even real vaccines.

The reduction in the schedule was recommended by Dr. Tracy Beth Hoeg, the acting director of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. During a recent presentation, Dr. Hoeg noted that Denmark only recommends 11 vaccinations during the first 12 months of an infant’s life, and they don’t have any notable disease outbreaks as a result.

For example, when was the last time you heard about an outbreak of dengue fever in Denmark? Never? Dengue is a sub-tropical disease that Americans never even encounter unless some scuzzy foreigner carries it across the border. Denmark also never has outbreaks of respiratory syncytial virus, Hepatitis A, Hepatitis B, or meningococcal disease, despite not vaccinating babies for those diseases.

The CDC still recommends the DTAP (diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis), HiB (hemophilia influence type B), PCV15 (pneumococcal conjugate), polio, MMR (measles, mumps, rubella), and chickenpox within the first 12 to 15 months of life. It also reduces the recommendation for the human papillomavirus (HPV) to one shot instead of two, once girls reach age 12. (Alternatively, you could teach your daughters abstinence and they never have to worry about HPV. Why don’t our so-called “public health” agencies ever tell parents that?)

Many parents or would-be parents are still likely confused about this. People are funny when it comes to worrying about catching diseases, and we’ve been fed a ton of propaganda over the last century about how vaccines are miracle products.

But what’s the cutoff? Every vaccine you give to a person permanently alters their immune system. Up until a couple of days ago, the CDC was fully recommending that every child receive 72 vaccines before age 18, and a record-high 18 shots during the first 12 months of a baby’s life. All 50 states use that schedule and make the 72 shots mandatory for public school attendance for kids—even though the CDC only made “recommendations.”

In truly crazy states like California, kids are required to receive between 84 and 86 shots during their first 18 years of life. So, what’s the cutoff? At a certain point, don’t you think it could be harmful for the health of many children to take that many permanent, immune system-altering injections?

For parents who still have an unhealthy fear of diseases they will never encounter, they are still allowed to play Russian roulette with their child’s health and give them all 86 vaccines. The CDC is not stopping any of these vaccines. Everyone still has access to them. They’ve just lowered the number of recommendations.

Here’s something to keep in mind as parents discuss this. The current rate of children developing autism in the United States is more than twice that of Denmark. Only 1 out of 66 kids in Denmark develop sudden-onset autism after a vaccine visit. In the US, it’s 1 out of 31 kids.

The CDC is now following Denmark’s lead. The revised vaccination schedule is a huge step in the right direction. Sadly, it’s going to take more time before many parents come to realize the truth.


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