Health & Fitness

Adding COVID To CDC Vax Schedule Doesn’t Mean What You May Think

Despite what you may have heard, the CDC does not have the authority to require COVID-19 vaccinations as a condition of school enrollment.

The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted unanimously Thursday to add COVID-19 vaccines and boosters to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s recommended immunization schedule for children 6 months and older and adults.
The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted unanimously Thursday to add COVID-19 vaccines and boosters to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s recommended immunization schedule for children 6 months and older and adults. (Jessica McGowan/Getty Images, File)

ACROSS AMERICA — Children 6 months and older and adults should get COVID-19 vaccinations and boosters, an advisory committee of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a unanimous vote Thursday endorsing the inclusion of the shots in the agency’s recommended immunization schedule.

Nothing in the vote of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which is made up of public health, medical and scientific experts outside the CDC, requires that Americans get the shots.

Fact-checkers were busy ahead of Thursday’s action.

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On Tuesday, Fox News host Tucker Carlson falsely claimed in a tweet that “the CDC is about to add the Covid vaccine to the childhood immunization schedule, which would make the vax mandatory for kids to attend school.”

CDC officials do think it’s a good idea for people to get inoculations against COVID-19, which has killed 1.06 million people in the U.S. alone since the first laboratory-confirmed domestic case was reported in January 2020.

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But the CDC is not requiring vaccinations as a condition of enrollment. The agency does not have the authority to do so.

“Moving COVID-19 to the recommended immunization schedule does not impact what vaccines are required for school entrance,” Dr. Nirav Shah, director of the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said during Thursday’s ACIP meeting, held via webcast.

“Local control matters,” Shah continued. “And we honor that the decision around school entrance for vaccines rests where it did before, which is with the state level, the county level and at the municipal level, if it exists at all.”

That state laws establish vaccination requirements is clearly stated on the CDC website.

“These laws often apply not only to children attending public schools but also to those attending private schools and day care facilities,” according to the website. “All states provide medical exemptions, and some state laws also offer exemptions for religious and/or philosophical reasons. State laws also establish mechanisms for enforcement of school vaccination requirements and exemptions.”

Among those piling on Carlson after Tuesday’s broadcast was Dr. Peter Hotez, the dean of the National School of Topical Medicine.

“Actually, the CDC clearly says that ‘state laws establish vaccination requirements’ and Fox News knows this,” Hotez wrote on Twitter. “Guessing just another antivaccine dog whistle for their ratings.”

Tara Smith, a professor of epidemiology at Kent State University College of Public Health, also called out Carlson.

Misinformation,” she tweeted. “The CDC does not decide which vaccines are mandatory for school attendance in kids. That’s left to each state, which is why they are not uniform across the country.”

Voices for Vaccines, a family-led vaccine advocacy group that uses peer-to-peer conversations about vaccines and the diseases they prevent, explained why the advisory committee’s recommendation matters.

“Please note: this is not how school entry requirements work,” the organization tweeted. “Recommending vaccines makes them available in the Vaccines for Children program, get insurance to pay for them, and makes it easier for people to get compensated for possible injuries.”

The action Thursday merely makes the COVID-19 shots part of the CDC children’s vaccine program, which provides many types of free inoculations to millions of kids every year.

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