President Trump endorses narrower childhood vaccine schedule as mRNA and AI-driven design reshape vaccine development in 2026.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Friday directing federal agencies to align policies with a January study from the Department of Health and Human Services that recommends reducing the number of vaccines routinely given to American children. The order tasks the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention with reviewing the study and updating vaccine recommendations to "provide maximum flexibility to parents and doctors." This marks a significant policy shift, one long advocated by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and could reshape the standard immunization schedule.
The HHS study, which found that the United States recommends more childhood vaccines than many peer nations, recommends vaccinating all children against 11 diseases. Several others — including flu, rotavirus, hepatitis A and B, some forms of meningitis, and RSV — would be recommended only for high-risk groups or through shared decision-making between doctors and parents. The administration had previously attempted to narrow recommendations but was blocked by a federal judge in Massachusetts; the decision is under appeal.
The study recommends vaccinating all children against 11 diseases, while flu, rotavirus, hepatitis A and B, some meningitis, and RSV would be targeted for high-risk groups only.
Public health experts remain divided. Proponents argue the tailored approach reduces unnecessary interventions and respects parental choice, while critics warn it could leave vulnerable populations unprotected. The executive order adds weight to the study at a time when the administration is trying to focus on broader health initiatives, such as healthy eating, rather than Kennedy's more contentious vaccine policies.
While policy debates unfold, mRNA vaccine platforms are advancing into new therapeutic areas, building on the success of COVID-19 vaccines. In 2026, mRNA vaccines for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and influenza are in late-stage clinical trials, showing high efficacy and the potential for annual updates to match circulating strains. Early data indicate these vaccines could provide broader and more durable protection than current alternatives.
Personalized mRNA cancer vaccines are also progressing, with early clinical results demonstrating immune responses in melanoma and lung cancer patients.
Moderna and BioNTech are leading the charge, with several candidates combining multiple antigens in a single shot. The regulatory pathway has been accelerated, thanks to lessons learned during the pandemic. If approved, these vaccines could transform prevention and treatment for millions.
Artificial intelligence is revolutionizing vaccine development by dramatically compressing design timelines. AI models now predict viral protein structures and identify optimal antigen candidates in days, a process that once took months. This capability proved critical in 2025 when an unexpected influenza strain evaded traditional predictions, and AI-enabled platforms rapidly designed an updated vaccine.
The combination of AI and mRNA technology creates a powerful pipeline: AI designs the vaccine, and mRNA manufacturing produces it at scale. This synergy is expected to be the backbone of pandemic preparedness in the coming years.