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The CDC just rewrote 40 years of pediatric vaccine policy.
On January 5, 2026, the Acting CDC Director signed a decision that fundamentally changes how America vaccinates children.
The new schedule focuses only on “consensus vaccines”: measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, polio, Haemophilus influenza type B, pneumoccal disease, human papillomavirus, and varicella.
Here’s what makes this earth-shattering:
For the first time since the 1980s, the CDC is limiting its recommendations rather than expanding them. This represents a complete philosophical shift from universal disease prevention to selective protection.
Think about the implications:
• Hepatitis B, rotavirus, and influenza vaccines, previously standard, are no longer on the consensus list
• States will now decide which additional vaccines to require for school entry
• Pediatricians must navigate conflicting guidance between federal and state recommendations
• Insurance coverage for non-consensus vaccines becomes uncertain
💡 The timing couldn’t be worse.
We’re experiencing the highest respiratory illness levels since 1997-98. Flu activity is at “high” or “very high” levels in 46 states. Yet we’re scaling back immunization recommendations.
This isn’t just about vaccines, it’s about trust.
When the CDC changes course this dramatically, it creates confusion for parents, frustration for providers, and opportunities for preventable disease outbreaks.
Pediatric practices will bear the burden of explaining why vaccines that were essential last month are now optional. Community health centers serving vulnerable populations will struggle with inconsistent coverage policies.
The real question: Are we prioritizing political consensus over scientific consensus?
Public health isn’t supposed to be a popularity contest. It’s about protecting those who can’t protect themselves, especially children in underserved communities who rely on comprehensive vaccination programs.
What happens when the next measles outbreak hits a school district that decided hepatitis B wasn’t “consensus” enough?
♻️ Repost if childhood disease prevention shouldn’t be subject to political winds
👉 Follow me, Jonathan Govette, for real-time updates on healthcare technology and business news. LinkedIn Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathangovette/
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Author:

Jonathan Govette is a seasoned healthcare and technology executive with more than two decades of experience building, scaling, and advising digital health companies. He is the Co-Founder and CEO of Oatmeal Health, an AI-driven Lung Cancer Screening and Diagnostics company focused on expanding access to early detection for underrepresented populations, particularly patients served by Federally Qualified Health Centers and value-based health plans.
With a background in engineering, product development, and strategic partnerships, Jonathan has founded and led multiple health technology ventures across clinical care delivery, regulated medical software, and AI-enabled diagnostics. His work sits at the intersection of medicine, technology, and health equity, with a consistent focus on translating complex clinical problems into scalable, real-world solutions.
Jonathan has spent much of his professional life dedicated to improving outcomes for marginalized and underserved communities. He has designed and implemented frameworks that align clinical quality, reimbursement, and technology to sustainably advance health equity at scale. This mission is deeply personal and informs his leadership philosophy and long-term vision for healthcare transformation.
In addition to his operating experience, Jonathan is an author and long-time writer in the healthcare domain, with over 20 years of published work covering digital health, medical innovation, and healthcare systems. He is a frequent mentor to early-stage founders and regularly advises startups on product strategy, partnerships, and go-to-market execution in regulated healthcare environments.
Before entering industry full-time, Jonathan nearly pursued a career in medicine with an early path toward cardiothoracic surgery, an experience that continues to shape his clinical perspective and respect for frontline care delivery.
CEO | Oatmeal Health | AI Lung Cancer Startup | Engineer | Writer | Almost Became a Doctor (Cardiac Thoracic Surgeon) | 3x Health Tech Founder | Startup Mentor | Follow to share what I’ve learned along the way.




