Linda Boyle: Childhood vaccination changes are coming

By LINDA BOYLE

A leaked FDA memo confirmed what officials have been denying for years: Senior regulators acknowledged Covid-19 jabs killed ten American children.

It was Dr. Vinay Prasad, the lead for FDA’s Center for Biologics, who stated career safety staff have identified at least ten children deaths with the true total “certainly an underestimate.”

This was an internal FDA review—finding the deaths buried in VAERS and noting that the agency ignored early myocarditis signals.  Instead of doing something about this, they pushed low-risk kids to get the jab –potentially harming more children than the jab protected.

These ten deaths were of the 96 child deaths reported in VAERS between 2021 and 2024.  These data are even more reason for the change in Covid-19 recommendations for children recently enacted in September of this year.  The jab is no longer blanketly recommended—but the parents with the doctor can decide what is best for their child.  It’s about time the government brought parents into the decision equation.

Experts reviewing the FDA memo state it misuses VAERS data, which now is considered unreliable since anyone, including patients, can submit reports of adverse effects. Hmm.  The information in the database was good before but now it’s unreliable?

Last week the CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) met.  The ACIP recommended to the CDC that it narrow the CDC guidance for newborns receiving the hepatitis B shot.  If approved, it will end the universal recommendation for all newborn babies to get the hepatitis B vaccine.  Instead, the hepatis B vaccine will be given to infants based on the infant’s risk.  If the mother is positive for hepatitis B or it is not known if she is positive, the baby should get the shot.  If the mother is hepatitis B negative, parents should discuss with the doctor if their child needs to get this vaccine immediately after birth.

A second committee vote was taken on how many hepatitis B shots the baby should get.  The current recommendation is three—one at birth, one at one to three months later, and a third at six to 15 months of age.

The panel voted 6-4, with one member abstaining, to recommend the child’s antibody levels should be evaluated after each dose to see if additional doses are needed. The result may be that some children get one or two shots instead of the standard three shots.

Dr. Adam Langer of the CDC stated that hepatitis B vaccine studies support a three-shot schedule. He cautioned against relying on antibody testing to justify fewer doses, as current data do not support this assumption.

Shortly after that meeting, President Trump ordered HHS Secretary Kennedy and the director of the CDC to look at best practices from other countries to see if the current vaccine schedule makes sense.  Trump stated, “In January 2025, the United States recommended vaccinating all children for 18 diseases, including COVID-19, making our country a high outlier in the number of vaccinations recommended for all children.  Study is warranted to ensure that Americans are receiving the best, scientifically supported medical advice in the world.”

The memo goes on to state the contrast of the number of childhood vaccinations among various countries:  U.S. recommends shots for 18 diseases, Denmark recommends for 10 diseases, Japan for 14 diseases, and Germany for 15.

The following graph demonstrates the number of shots a child, from birth to age 18, receives in various developed countries:

The White House highlighted differences in timing and who should receive certain vaccines. For example, the U.S. has long advised giving all newborns a Hepatitis B vaccine at birth, while most developed countries only recommend it for babies whose mothers test positive for the virus.

The American Academy of Pediatrics says the longstanding U.S. recommendations are based on “robust evidence” and are “largely similar across developed countries,” with some variance due to factors like disease threats, demographics and health care systems. Seems to me from the graph above, it is more than just some variance.   Are our children really sicker than children born in other western countries?

The Independent Medical Alliance (IMA), a national coalition of physicians, healthcare providers, and medical researchers, praised the President’s memo to truly evaluate our childhood vaccine schedules with best practices from peer, developed countries.

Dr. Joseph Varon the IMA President and Chief Medical Officer said the following: “This is a meaningful step toward restoring evidence-based, individualized pediatric care and ensuring U.S. policy reflects both the best global science and the real-world needs of American families.”

And there is more good news.   The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced last week that it is investigating a complaint that a Midwestern school disregarded a valid religious exemption and failed to obtain parental consent when vaccinating a student.

“Today, we are putting pediatric medical professionals on notice: you cannot sideline parents,” HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said in a statement. “When providers ignore parental consent, violate exemptions to vaccine mandates, or keep parents in the dark about their children’s care, we will act decisively. We will use every tool at our disposal to protect families and restore accountability.”

As this work goes forward, already many of the major medical associations and Big Pharma are sounding the alarm.   After the Covid-19 recommendations these organizations along with certain states came up with their own guidelines.

As this story develops, I am sure they will continue to pull away from CDC—the mantra of “trust the CDC” during the Covid years has dramatically morphed to “don’t trust the CDC now”.

The financial gains/losses are too big to ignore.

The new bottom line should be what is best for all our children—not Big Pharma and its stakeholders.

Linda Boyle, RN, MSN, DM, was formerly the chief nurse for the 3rd Medical Group, JBER, and was the interim director of the Alaska VA. Most recently, she served as Director for Central Alabama VA Healthcare System. She is the director of the Alaska Covid Alliance/Alaskans 4 Personal Freedom.

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One thought on “Linda Boyle: Childhood vaccination changes are coming”
  1. “ but the parents with the doctor can decide what is best for their child. ” authorities just don’t want to admit they were wrong about the safety of Covid shots because then they can be sued.
    Leaders today really aren’t very smart because they don’t read. What they do read is worthless.

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