You said: What is the current recommended vaccine schedule for children?
ChatGPT said: Here’s the current U.S. childhood immunization schedule (ages 0–18) as of the CDC’s May 29, 2025 update healthychildren.org+15cdc.gov+15trumedsystems.com+15:
📅 Age-Based Routine Vaccines
Birth to 15 Months
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RSV antibody (nirsevimab) – 1 dose during first RSV season, depending on maternal vaccination; additional dose at 8–19 months cppdocs.org+3cdc.gov+3verywellhealth.com+3.
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Hepatitis B – at birth, 1 month, and 6 months.
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DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis) – at 2, 4, 6, and 15 months.
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Hib – at 2, 4, 6, and 12–15 months.
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Polio (IPV) – at 2, 4, and 6–15 months.
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Pneumococcal (PCV13 or PCV20) – at 2, 4, 6, and 12–15 months thescottishsun.co.uk+3cdc.gov+3en.wikipedia.org+3.
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Rotavirus – oral vaccine at 2 and 4 months (with possible third at 6 months).
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MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) – first dose at 12–15 months; Varicella first dose also then healthychildren.org+6en.wikipedia.org+6en.wikipedia.org+6en.wikipedia.org+4cdc.gov+4en.wikipedia.org+4.
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Hepatitis A – two doses starting at 12 months.
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Influenza – annually starting at 6 months.
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COVID‑19 – mRNA vaccines (Pfizer/Moderna) from 6 months, per shared clinical decision-making; immunocompromised children may need extra doses cdc.gov+2cdc.gov+2paltmed.org+2.
Ages 4–6 Years
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DTaP – 4th (if not given at 15 months) and 5th dose.
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IPV – final dose.
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MMR – second dose.
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Varicella – second dose (can be 3 months after the first, but typically at age 4–6) cdc.gov.
Ages 7–10 Years
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Catch-up doses for any missed childhood vaccines.
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COVID‑19, flu – annual or shared decision-making as appropriate.
Ages 11–12 Years
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HPV – start 2‑dose series (3 doses if started at age 15+) theguardian.com+15cdc.gov+15thesun.co.uk+15.
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Meningococcal (MenACWY) – first dose.
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Tdap – booster for tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis.
Ages 16–18 Years
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Meningococcal booster (MenACWY) – second dose.
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MenB – recommended for some teens based on risk.
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Catch-up any missed vaccines.
🩺 Special Considerations
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RSV prevention: Offer nirsevimab for infants during RSV season, especially those at high risk cdc.gov+2cdc.gov+2en.wikipedia.org+2thesun.co.uk+1en.wikipedia.org+1verywellhealth.com+2cdc.gov+2cppdocs.org+2.
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COVID‑19: At least one dose for children ≥6 months; immunocompromised kids may need more cdc.gov+11en.wikipedia.org+11healthychildren.org+11.
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HPV: Routine at 11–12; can start at 9; catch-up through age 18 cdc.gov.
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Pneumococcal vaccine: 4-dose series routinely for all under 5 with newer formulations .
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