Vaccines for Infants & Children

Evidence-based guidance on childhood immunization.

Vaccinating children beginning in infancy is one of the most effective public health interventions. This page explains the rationale for early immunization, addresses common parental concerns, and presents the evidence supporting the childhood vaccination schedule.

Why Vaccinate So Early?

The Childhood Schedule

The CDC recommends vaccinations begin at birth and continue through age 18. Key milestones include:

Addressing Common Concerns

Too many vaccines?

Studies show children's immune systems can handle many more antigens than vaccines present. The total antigens in vaccines today are far fewer than in earlier decades.

Vaccine overload?

Research does not support the "vaccine overload" hypothesis. Studies show vaccinated children develop immune responses normally and have no increased risk of infections.

Natural immunity vs. vaccination

While natural infection can provide immunity, the risks are severe. For example, measles can cause deafness, brain damage, or death — vaccination provides immunity without these risks.

Sources & Citations

Related Pages