Bill Summary
A9648 requires that New York children receive certain vaccines according to regulations issued by the State Health Commissioner, who must use generally accepted medical standards and consider recommendations from major medical bodies such as the American Academy of Pediatrics, American Academy of Family Physicians, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, American College of Physicians, the federal ACIP, and similar scientific organizations. It updates public health and social services law so that childhood vaccine mandates (including schedules for newborns and boosters like meningococcal shots) are explicitly grounded in these commissioner‑written regulations, and it directs social services districts to give families on public assistance information and schedules for age‑appropriate immunizations for children under five.
Why It Matters to the Make America Healthy Again Movement
The MAHA Movement opposes this bill because it further entrenches centralized, expert‑panel‑driven vaccine requirements for children—shifting power to the state commissioner and national medical organizations—rather than limiting mandates or expanding opt‑outs as MAHA favors. By locking school‑age and early‑childhood vaccine schedules to commissioner regulations built on mainstream medical consensus, A9648 moves New York away from MAHA’s priorities of parental choice, medical freedom, and tighter constraints on compulsory vaccination.