The U.S. ends universal childhood vaccine recommendations for flu and three diseases, raising public health concerns.

Federal health officials announced Monday that they were reducing the number of vaccines recommended for all children in the United States to align with the immunization schedules…

President Trump called in December for reducing the number of vaccines in children's schedules. CDC acted on Monday.

Jabs to prevent influenza, rotavirus, RSV and other vaccines are no longer fully recommended

The overhaul is the latest in a host of sweeping changes made under the Trump administration by health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr.

President Donald Trump in December asked the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to align with how peer nations approach vaccine recommendations.

Medical experts slammed the move, saying it could lead to reduced uptake of important vaccinations and increase disease.

Among those left on the recommended-for-everyone list are measles, whooping cough, polio, tetanus, chickenpox and HPV.

The U.S. ends universal childhood vaccine recommendations for flu and three diseases, raising public health concerns.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said it was revising its childhood immunization schedule to recommend fewer vaccines. What to know.

"There is no scientific evidence supporting the change in recommendations,” one expert told HuffPost.

Le nuove linee guida annunciate dal dipartimento della Salute guidato da Robert F. Kennedy segnano un passo indietro nella prevenzione e preoccupano gli esperti