by Megan Redshaw,Childrens Health Defense:

Virginia’s Department of Health is recommending infants ages 6 to 11 months receive a MMR vaccine — earlier than the age recommended by the CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics. Doctors and other vaccine experts told The Defender that Virginia’s guidance is “reckless” and “not grounded in science.”

Virginia’s Department of Healthis recommending infants ages 6 to 11 months receive a MMR vaccine — earlier than the age recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP).

TRUTH LIVES on athttps://sgtreport.tv/

Doctors and othervaccineexperts toldThe Defenderthat Virginia’s guidance is “reckless” and “not grounded in science.”

The state’s recommendations also include an accelerated measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccination schedule, advising that infants get the second dose in the two-dose MMR series 28 days after the first.

Virginia’s recommendation comes in response to a recentmeaslesoutbreak in Buckingham County, which as of Tuesday had reached54 cases.

The state’s MMR vaccine guidance was included in a May 13letterfrom Virginia State Health Commissioner Cameron Webb. The recommendations call for infants ages 6 to 11 months to “get an early dose of the MMR vaccine,” and two more doses at the AAP’srecommended ages, at least 28 days apart.

The CDCandAAP recommenda minimum age of 12 months for MMR vaccination, except in “special situations,” such as international travel.

Dr. Paige Perriello, a Charlottesville-based pediatrician, told local news outlet29 News-WVIRthat while the two-dose MMR series is typically started at 12 months, the vaccine can be administered earlier “during an outbreak” of measles.

Source: SGT Report