We have an epidemic and no its not covid, monkey pox, bird flu or anything else we are being regularly being fed.
The CDC has now lowered childhood developmental guidelines. Why are these guidelines being lowered? Is their a cause?
Children were previous expected to say their first word by the age of one, but now that expectation has been pushed to 15 months. By the age of two, children were expected to know two full sentences, but that was pushed back as well to a mere two words. The CDC no longer believes that a three-year-old toddler is expected to speak in full sentences. Children were expected to crawl by 10 months of age, but the CDC says that crawling is no longer a clear indicator of cognitive development.
So are we just going to accept that children today are inferior in their growth and not demand answers as to just what the hell is going on and why?
Robert. F. Kennedy has long spearheaded the Children’s Defense Network that aims to uncover why children across the world are less healthy than previous generations. Developmental issues like autism and ADHD have doubled since the 90s, and in some areas, one in 34 children suffer from autism. Autoimmune disorders are rising disproportionately and an estimated 13% to 25% of children require special education. Over half (54%) of American children suffer from some form of a chronic health condition.
This generation is the sickest in modern history. Why? One in 285 American children face cancer diagnoses. From 2001 to 2020, 47% of American children were more likely to die before reaching adulthood than children in other developed nations. These are extremely concerning statistics and we must get to the root cause to save our civilization. Kennedy’s mission to Make America Healthy Again is extremely admirable. The only reason his pleas for help are not seeing bipartisan support is due to lobbying and corrupt politicians who act against the best interest of the people. This is yet another reason why the establishment is adamantly against Donald Trump as major donors within Big Pharma and other health industries have purchased politicians and they cannot tempt him with their bribery.
2020 findings
https://publichealth.jhu.edu/2020/us-autism-rates-up-10-percent-in-new-cdc-report
Researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health contributed to a new U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that finds the prevalence of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) among 11 surveillance sites as 1 in 54 among children aged 8 years in 2016 (or 1.85 percent). This is a 10 percent increase from the most recent report two years ago when it was 1 in 59, and the highest prevalence since the CDC began tracking ASD in 2000. Consistent with previous reports, boys were 4 to 5 times more likely to be identified with ASD than girls. The rate for ASD is 1 in 34 among boys (or 2.97 percent) and 1 in 145 among girls (or 0.69 percent).
2023 Findings
https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2023/p0323-autism.html
A second report on 4-year-old children in the same 11 communities highlights the impact of COVID-19, showing disruptions in progress in early autism detection. In the early months of the pandemic, 4-year-old children were less likely to have an evaluation or be identified with ASD than 8-year-old children when they were the same age. This coincides with the interruptions in childcare and healthcare services during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Disruptions due to the pandemic in the timely evaluation of children and delays in connecting children to the services and support they need could have long-lasting effects,” said Karen Remley, M.D., director of CDC’s National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities. “The data in this report can help communities better understand how the pandemic impacted early identification of autism in young children and anticipate future needs as these children get older.”
Shifting demographics among children identified with autism
ASD prevalence among Asian, Black, and Hispanic children was at least 30% higher in 2020 than 2018, and ASD prevalence among White children was 14.6% higher than in 2018. For the first time, the percentage of 8-year-old Asian or Pacific Islander (3.3%) Hispanic (3.2%) and Black (2.9%), children identified with autism was higher than among 8-year-old White children (2.4%). This is the opposite of racial and ethnic differences observed in previous ADDM reports for 8-year-olds. These shifts may reflect improved screening, awareness, and access to services among historically underserved groups.
Additionally, disparities for co-occurring intellectual disability have persisted. A higher percentage of Black children with autism were identified with intellectual disability compared with White, Hispanic, or Asian or Pacific Islander children with autism. These differences could relate in part to access to services that diagnose and support children with autism.
Overall, autism prevalence within the ADDM sites was nearly four times higher for boys than girls. Still, this is the first ADDM report in which the prevalence of autism among 8-year-old girls has exceeded 1%.
Community differences in autism prevalence
Autism prevalence in the 11 ADDM communities ranged from 1 in 43 (2.3%) children in Maryland to 1 in 22 (4.5%) in California. These variations could be due to how communities are identifying children with autism. The variability across ADDM Network sites offers an opportunity to compare local policies and models for delivering diagnostic and intervention services that could enhance autism identification and provide more comprehensive support to people with autism.
Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring Network
Established in 2000, the ADDM Network is the only network to track the number and characteristics of children with autism and other developmental disabilities in multiple communities throughout the United States. It provides estimates of the prevalence and characteristics of autism among 8-year-old and 4-year-old children in 11 communities in Arizona, Arkansas, California, Georgia, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, Tennessee, Utah, and Wisconsin.
Tools for parents, healthcare providers, early childhood educators and caregivers
CDC’s “Learn the Signs. Act Early.” program provides free resources in English, Spanish, and other languages to monitor children’s development starting at 2 months of age. CDC’s Milestone Tracker mobile app can help parents and caregivers track their child’s development and share the information with their healthcare providers. For more information visit www.cdc.gov/ActEarly.
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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
CDC works 24/7 protecting America’s health, safety and security. Whether diseases start at home or abroad, are curable or preventable, chronic or acute, or from human activity or deliberate attack, CDC responds to America’s most pressing health threats. CDC is headquartered in Atlanta and has experts located throughout the United States and the world.
I cannot resist pointing out this last paragraph, let it sink in.
https://www.cdc.gov/autism/data-research/index.html
Surveillance Year Birth Year Number of ADDM Sites Reporting Combined Prevalence per 1,000 Children (Range Across ADDM Sites)
Survey year Birth year Combined Prevalence per 1 in X children
1,000 Children
(Range Across ADDM Sites)
2020 2012 11 27.6 (23.1-44.9) 1 in 36
2018 2010 11 23.0 (16.5-38.9) 1 in 44
2016 2008 11 18.5 (18.0-19.1) 1 in 54
2014 2006 11 16.8 (13.1-29.3) 1 in 59
2012 2004 11 14.5 (8.2-24.6) 1 in 69
2010 2002 11 14.7 (5.7-21.9) 1 in 68
2008 2000 14 11.3 (4.8-21.2) 1 in 88
2006 1998 11 9.0 (4.2-12.1) 1 in 110
2004 1996 8 8.0 (4.6-9.8) 1 in 125
2002 1994 14 6.6 (3.3-10.6) 1 in 150
2000 1992 6 6.7 (4.5-9.9) 1 in 150
About 1 in 6 (17%) children aged 3–17 years were diagnosed with a developmental disability, as reported by parents, during a study period of 2009–2017. These included autism, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, blindness, and cerebral palsy, among others. [Read Summary]
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/72/ss/ss7202a1.htm?s_cid=ss7202a1_w
During the past two decades, ASD prevalence estimates of children aged 8 years from the ADDM Network have increased markedly, from 6.7 (one in 150) per 1,000 in 2000 to 23.0 (one in 44) in 2018 (3,12). In addition, overall ASD prevalence among White children was 50% higher than among Black or African American (Black) or Hispanic children in earlier years. (Persons of Hispanic origin might be of any race but are categorized as Hispanic; all racial groups are non-Hispanic). These gaps narrowed over time until ASD prevalence among Black and Hispanic matched prevalence among White children for the first time in 2016 and 2018, respectively (11,12). Similarly, robust associations between autism prevalence and higher socioeconomic status were observed in ADDM Network sites during 2002–2010 (13); however, this association was much more variable in 2018 (12). These patterns have largely been interpreted as improvements in more equitable identification of ASD, particularly for children in groups that have less access or face greater barriers in obtaining services (including diagnostic evaluations). However, consistent disparities for co-occurring intellectual disability exist because among all children with ASD, Black children have the largest proportion identified with intellectual disability (10–12).
Below is the schedule for childhood vaccines for 2023, the CDC has added the C-19 jab to 2024 schedule.
https://www.chop.edu/vaccine-education-center/science-history/vaccine-history/developments-by-year
Newborn vaccines
Hepatitis B (HepB) within 24 hours of birth. This is the first dose in a three-dose series.
RSV (respiratory syncytial virus) antibody within one week of birth. This only happens if your baby is born during RSV season (typically October to March) AND you didn’t receive the RSV vaccine while pregnant. If it’s not yet RSV season, your baby can wait until just before the season starts for this immunization.
RSV antibody technically isn’t a vaccine, as it provides ready-made protection. This makes it different from a vaccine, which trains your baby’s immune system to create antibodies. So, providers call it an immunization. But most people use the words interchangeably.
2-month vaccines
HepB, dose two.
Rotavirus, dose one.
Diphtheria, tetanus and acellular pertussis (DTaP), dose one.
Haemophilus influenza type B (Hib), dose one.
Pneumococcal conjugate (PCV), dose one.
Inactivated poliovirus (IPV), dose one.
4-month vaccines
Rotavirus, dose two.
DTaP, dose two.
Hib, dose two.
PCV, dose two.
IPV, dose two.
6-month vaccines
HepB, dose three.
Rotavirus, dose three — only if doing the three-dose series.
DTaP, dose three.
Hib, dose three — only if doing the four-dose series.
PCV, dose three.
IPV, dose three.
Flu vaccine.
COVID-19 vaccine.
12-month vaccines
Measles, mumps and rubella (MMR), dose one.
Hepatitis A (HepA), dose one.
PCV, dose four.
15-month vaccines
Varicella (VAR), dose one.
DTaP, dose four.
Hib, final dose — this will be dose three or four depending on the series.
18-month vaccines
HepA, dose two.
Vaccines for 4-year-olds
DTaP, dose five.
IPV, dose four.
MMR, dose two.
VAR, dose two.
Your child can have these vaccines starting at age 4 but a little later is OK, too — up until their 6th birthday. Your pediatrician can advise you on appropriate timing and help make sure your child gets all the vaccines they need before turning 6.
Vaccines for 11- to 12-year-olds
Tetanus, diphtheria and acellular pertussis (Tdap), dose one (one dose in childhood, but every 10 years for life).
Human papillomavirus (HPV), dose one and dose two, separated by at least five months. Your child can begin this series prior to their 11th birthday — starting at age 9.
Meningococcal (MenACWY), dose one.
Vaccines for 16-year-olds
MenACWY, dose two.
1985-1994
■ Hib vaccine developed and added to the schedule
■ Recommended vaccines:
– DTP (Diphtheria, Tetanus, Pertussis)
– Polio (OPV)
– MMR (Measles, Mumps, Rubella)
– Hib (Haemophilius influenzae Type B
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Related Topics:
Vaccines for Your Children | Vaccine Information for Adults | Pregnancy and Vaccination
November 16, 2023
Child and Adolescent Immunization Schedule by Age (Addendum updated June 27, 2024)
Recommendations for Ages 18 Years or Younger, United States, 2024
Purpose
Guide health care providers in determining recommended vaccines for each age group.
How to use the schedule
Vaccines in the Child Immunization Schedule
To make vaccination recommendations, healthcare providers should:
Determine recommended vaccine by age (Table 1 – By Age)
Determine recommended interval for catch-up vaccination (Table 2 – Catch-up)
Assess need for additional recommended vaccines by medical condition or other indication (Table 3 – By Medical Indication)
Review vaccine types, frequencies, intervals, and considerations for special situations (Notes)
Review contraindications and precautions for vaccine types (Appendix)
Review new or updated ACIP guidance (Addendum)
Download the Schedule
Compliant version of the schedule
Birth to 15 Months
Legend
Range of recommended ages for all children Range of recommended ages
for catch-up vaccination Range of recommended ages for certain high-risk groups Recommended vaccination can begin in this age group Recommended vaccination based on shared clinical decision-making No recommendation/
not applicable
These recommendations must be read with the notes that follow. For those who fall behind or start late, provide catch-up vaccination at the earliest opportunity as indicated by the green bars. To determine minimum intervals between doses, see the catch-up schedule (Table 2).
Vaccine and other immunizing agents Birth 1 mo 2 mos 4 mos 6 mos 9 mos 12 mos 15 mos Respiratory syncytial virus
(RSV-mAb [Nirsevimab]) 1 dose depending on maternal RSV vaccination status, See notes 1 dose (8 through 19 months), See notes Hepatitis B
(HepB) 1st dose ←2nd dose→ ←3rd dose→ Rotavirus (RV)
RV1 (2-dose series); RV5 (3-dose series) 1st dose 2nd dose See notes Diphtheria, tetanus, & acellular pertussis
(DTaP: <7 yrs) 1st dose 2nd dose 3rd dose ←4th dose→ Haemophilus influenzae type b
(Hib) 1st dose 2nd dose See notes ←3rd or 4th dose,
See notes→ Pneumococcal conjugate
(PCV15, PCV20) 1st dose 2nd dose 3rd dose ←4th dose→ Inactivated poliovirus
(IPV: <18 yrs) 1st dose 2nd dose ←3rd dose→ COVID-19
(1vCOV-mRNA, 1vCOV-aPS) 1 or more doses of updated (2023–2024 Formula) vaccine
(See notes) Influenza (IIV4)
Annual vaccination 1 or 2 doses
Influenza (LAIV4)
(MMR) See notes ←1st dose→ Varicella
(VAR) ←1st dose→ Hepatitis A
(HepA) (See notes) ←2-dose series, See notes→ Tetanus, diphtheria, & acellular pertussis
(Tdap: ≥7 yrs) Human papillomavirus
(HPV) Meningococcal
(MenACWY-CRM ≥2 mos, MenACWY-TT ≥2years) See notes Meningococcal B
(MenB-4C, MenB-FHbp) Respiratory syncytial virus vaccine
(RSV [Abrysvo]) Dengue
(DEN4CYD: 9-16 yrs) Mpox
18 Months to 18 Years
Vaccine and other immunizing agents 18 mos 19-23 mos 2-3 yrs 4-6 yrs 7-10 yrs 11-12 yrs 13-15 yrs 16 yrs 17-18 yrs Respiratory syncytial virus
(RSV-mAb [Nirsevimab]) 1 dose (8 through 19 months), See notes Hepatitis B
(HepB) ←3rd dose→ Rotavirus
(RV) RV1 (2-dose series); RV5 (3-dose series) Diphtheria, tetanus, & acellular pertussis
(DTaP: <7 yrs) ←4th dose→ 5th dose Haemophilus influenzae type b
(Hib) Pneumococcal conjugate
(PCV15, PCV20) Inactivated poliovirus
(IPV: <18 yrs) ←3rd dose→ 4th dose See notes COVID-19
(1vCOV-mRNA, 1vCOV-aPS) 1 or more doses of updated (2023–2024 Formula) vaccine (See notes) Influenza (IIV4)
Annual vaccination 1 or 2 doses Annual vaccination 1 dose only
Influenza (LAIV4)
Annual vaccination 1 or 2 doses
Annual vaccination 1 dose only Measles, mumps, rubella
(MMR) 2nd dose Varicella
(VAR) 2nd dose Hepatitis A
(HepA) ← 2-dose series, See notes→ Tetanus, diphtheria, & acellular pertussis
(Tdap: ≥7 yrs) 1 dose Human papillomavirus
(HPV) See notes Meningococcal
(MenACWY-CRM ≥2 mos, MenACWY-TT ≥2years) See notes 1st dose 2nd dose Meningococcal B
(MenB-4C, MenB-FHbp) See notes Respiratory syncytial virus vaccine
(RSV [Abrysvo]) Seasonal administration during pregnancy, See notes Dengue
(DEN4CYD: 9-16 yrs) Seropositive in endemic dengue areas (See notes) Mpox
To make vaccination recommendations, healthcare providers should:
Determine recommended vaccine by age (Table 1 - By Age)
Determine recommended interval for catch-up vaccination (Table 2 - Catch-up)
Assess need for additional recommended vaccines by medical condition or other indication (Table 3 - By Medical Indication)
Review vaccine types, frequencies, intervals, and considerations for special situations (Notes)
Review contraindications and precautions for vaccine types (Appendix)
Review new or updated ACIP guidance (Addendum)
Additional Information
Recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) and approved by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), American College of Nurse-Midwives (ACNM), American Academy of Physician Associates (AAPA), and National Association of Pediatric Nurse Practitioners (NAPNAP).
The comprehensive summary of the ACIP recommended changes made to the child and adolescent immunization schedule can be found in the January 11, 2024 MMWR.
Report
Suspected cases of reportable vaccine-preventable diseases or outbreaks to your state or local health department
Clinically significant adverse events to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) at www.vaers.hhs.gov or (800-822-7967)
Questions or comments
Contact www.cdc.gov/cdc-info or 800-CDC-INFO (800-232-4636), in English or Spanish, 8 a.m.–8 p.m. ET, Monday through Friday, excluding holidays.
Helpful information
Complete Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommendations
General Best Practice Guidelines for Immunization (including contraindications and precautions)
On This Page
Related Pages
View All Vaccines & Immunizations
Table 2: Catch-up Schedule for Children
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Well try as I might I am going to give my opinion below. ALL the above data if from the government - THE CDC! Nothing above is my opinion it is facts put together by the CDC. This should scare the living hell out of all of us. Who is going to take care of these people with autism that cannot take care of themselves? Is government going to euthanize them? Use them for experimentation? Yep that is what the Nazi’s and communists did.
This speaks to a deeper problem. Its a problem about US and our willingness to believe LIARS because they we have been told they are experts. Our willingness to justify and excuse their experimentation on our children. Why are we trusting these people with our and our children’s lives? Why are we accepting their answer of - we have no idea why but its not the jabs? Even though not a single one of these jabs has been placebo blind tested. Yes you read that right not a single one has been blind tested against a saline or none harmful placebo. I ‘ll have more on this in the future.
These are huge increases in the number of jabs these kids are taking today, vs 1995. Then look back to the 1950’s. Many of these jabs today are stacked into one jab. So these children’s immune system is hit from multiple angles. Is this causing brain inflammation? Are the adjutants like aluminum which is used in these jabs as a irritant accumulating? We all know that aluminum is a metal we should not used to cook with or store food in. Of course we were told it was safe - until it wasn’t.
No medical intervention - no matter how many times it is said is 100 % safe and effective. At this point we have enough evidence that serious study needs to be done. We have allowed the government and pharma to rule our lives no questions asked, and those of us that ask questions are called anti vaxxers, anti science and other derogatory names.
I want answers, we have been lead around long enough like 4 H market pigs in the pharma / government auction barn ring enriching them while we suffer and pay the bills. Are we just going to let them continue to dumb down expectations and guidelines? Are we going to continue letting them divert our attention away from what they are doing with fake pandemics? Are we going to let them to continue to harm our children?
If we cannot stand up for the least vocal and vulnerable members in society that is being irreparably harmed by something the government is doing just when do we stand up? Its too late to stand up when the cattle cars are being loaded.
We need to stop all mandatory jabs, we need the medical community to come clean and for once be honest instead of helping the Josef Mengele wanna be’s. We need to pause all these jabs until they are properly tested and proven safe.
Thank-you 1,000% agree.