CDC Updates Hepatitis B Birth Dose Recommendations: A summary
HereS a breakdown of the key data from the provided text regarding the CDC’s updated recommendations for Hepatitis B vaccinations:
Key Change:
* shared Decision-Making: The CDC now recommends shared decision-making between parents and clinicians regarding the Hepatitis B vaccine for infants born to mothers who test negative for Hepatitis B. This means the vaccine can be given at birth or delayed and started later in infancy (no earlier than 2 months).
What Remains the Same:
* Hepatitis B-Positive/Unknown Status Mothers: Infants born to mothers who test positive for Hepatitis B, or whose status is unknown, should still receive the vaccine within 12 hours of birth.
Why the Change?
The ACIP (CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization practices) made this change based on:
* Reliable Screening: Prenatal Hepatitis B screening is highly reliable, identifying almost all infections during pregnancy.
* Low Transmission Rate: Perinatal (around birth) transmission of Hepatitis B is vrey low in the U.S. due to existing prevention measures.
* Adaptability: Families and providers should have flexibility when a mother tests negative.
* Risk-Based Approach: Maintaining protection for high-risk infants while allowing individual decisions for low-risk infants.
What Expecting Parents Should Know:
* Get Tested: Pregnant women should be tested for Hepatitis B (this is covered by insurance).
* Infants of Positive/Unknown Mothers: Infants born to mothers who test positive or have unknown status should receive the vaccine within 12 hours.
Date of Suggestion: December 16, 2025 (as of the provided text).