MAHA Commission Calls for Independent Review of 72-Dose Childhood Vaccine Schedule

The MAHA Commission has formally requested an independent scientific review of the childhood vaccine schedule, which has grown from 24 doses in 1983 to 72 doses today, citing concerns about cumulative safety studies.

The request calls for scientists with no pharmaceutical industry ties to examine whether the complete schedule has ever been tested for safety as a whole, rather than individual vaccines tested in isolation.

Commission Questions

  • Has the complete 72-dose schedule been studied for cumulative effects?
  • What is the total aluminum adjuvant exposure in the first two years of life?
  • Why does the US schedule contain more doses than any other developed nation?
  • What explains the concurrent rise in schedule expansion and childhood chronic disease?

Response

CDC officials have stated the schedule is "continuously monitored for safety," though the commission noted no published studies examine the schedule as administered in its totality.

MAHA Daily Editorial: Asking questions is not anti-vaccine—it's pro-science. Parents deserve to know whether the most aggressive vaccine schedule in the world has been properly studied. Transparency builds trust.

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