Nurses Associations in West Coast Health Alliance States Oppose ACIP Decision on Hepatitis B Immunization

12/08/2025
The Washington State Nurses Association, Oregon Nurses Association, American Nurses
Association/California, and the Hawai’i-American Nurses Association oppose the decision by
the U.S. Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) to remove its longstanding
newborn Hepatitis B immunization recommendation. We stand by the West Coast Health
Alliance as well as expert institutions including the American Academy of Pediatrics, the
American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, and the Infectious Diseases Society of America
in reaffirming the safety and efficacy of this vaccine.
This decision by ACIP ignores overwhelming evidence showing decades of progress in
preventing a serious and potentially lifelong viral disease. Hepatitis B infection in infants can
lead to chronic liver disease, liver cancer, and premature death. The birth dose of the Hepatitis B
vaccine has been proven to be safe, effective, and essential in protecting newborns from
preventable harm, particularly in cases where maternal screening may be missed, delayed, or
incomplete.
Nurses are the largest and most trusted healthcare profession. Every day, we counsel families,
administer vaccines, and see firsthand the lifesaving impact that timely immunizations have
within our communities. The removal of this recommendation creates unnecessary confusion for
parents and healthcare professionals alike and opens the door to increased health
inequities—particularly for newborns in rural, underserved, or high-risk settings.
We call on Acting CDC Director Jim O’Neill to reject the ACIP recommendation and uphold the
universal Hepatitis B birth-dose vaccination recommendation. We urge the public to stand with
nurses and the overwhelming scientific consensus: vaccines save lives, and weakening
immunization guidelines puts public health at risk.