Wednesday, March 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Doctors fear CDC vaccine recommendation changes will fuel vaccine hesitancy in Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2026 11:43 AM
  • Doctors fear CDC vaccine recommendation changes will fuel vaccine hesitancy in Canada

Doctors say the sweeping changes to the childhood vaccine schedule in the U.S. will fuel hesitancy that will cross the border into Canada.

Ontario Medical Association President Dr. Zainab Abdurrahman says she is most worried about the confusion that parents may feel when they see that the U.S. and Canada have different immunization recommendations for kids.

She says that confusion can drive misinformation, causing the rise of serious illnesses that are preventable. 

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated its routine vaccine schedule on Monday, reducing the number of recommended shots.

Several long-standing vaccines that prevent illnesses such as rotavirus and meningococcal disease are no longer recommended for all children by the CDC. Neither are the flu and RSV shots. 

Instead, they're either recommended for "certain high-risk groups" or "based on shared clinical decision-making."

Abdurrahman says Canada’s vaccine schedule remains based in science, and unless there is a change in evidence, the schedule will stay the same. 

Immunologist Dawn Bowdish says any seeds of doubt among parents in the U.S. tend to spread into Canada.

She says her message to parents is that information coming out of the United States is no longer reliable.

“It pains me to say that, because historically the CDC was a world leader that the entire world could turn to for good information.”

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette

MORE National ARTICLES

AFN chief calls for speedy return of clean water legislation

AFN chief calls for speedy return of clean water legislation
The national chief of the Assembly of First Nations says that if the new Liberal government doesn't introduce legislation on access to clean drinking water within 100 days, the problem won't be fixed soon.

AFN chief calls for speedy return of clean water legislation

Lawyer for hockey player suggests complainant led his client to bathroom for sex

Lawyer for hockey player suggests complainant led his client to bathroom for sex
A defence lawyer representing one of five hockey players on trial for sexual assault is suggesting the complainant was the one who took the reins during a sexual encounter with his client.

Lawyer for hockey player suggests complainant led his client to bathroom for sex

Business community eyeing new cabinet for signs Carney serious on shifting priorities

Business community eyeing new cabinet for signs Carney serious on shifting priorities
Canada's business community will be watching Tuesday's cabinet shuffle for signs that Prime Minister Mark Carney will be easier to work with than the last Liberal government.

Business community eyeing new cabinet for signs Carney serious on shifting priorities

Eby's bill to speed up B.C. projects risks alienating NDP supporters, expert says

Eby's bill to speed up B.C. projects risks alienating NDP supporters, expert says
A political scientist says B.C. Premier David Eby is "marching the province toward a confrontation" in which Speaker Raj Chouhan will have to cast a deciding vote to push through a bill to speed up certain infrastructure projects. 

Eby's bill to speed up B.C. projects risks alienating NDP supporters, expert says

B.C.'s low snowpack, early-season melt raise drought concern: province

B.C.'s low snowpack, early-season melt raise drought concern: province
British Columbia's latest snowpack and water supply bulletin says drier, warmer weather last month has contributed to an early melt, raising concern for widespread drought this summer.

B.C.'s low snowpack, early-season melt raise drought concern: province

Alberta government announces indefinite freeze on industrial carbon price

Alberta government announces indefinite freeze on industrial carbon price
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says her government is freezing its industrial carbon price effective immediately at $95 per tonne of emissions.

Alberta government announces indefinite freeze on industrial carbon price