Shared clinical decision making, or individual decision making, has historically been used to provide immunizations that are beneficial for some, but not necessarily all, children. In January 2026, the CDC changed some of their vaccine recommendations (rotavirus, COVID-19, influenza, hepatitis A and B, and meningococcal disease) to shared clinical decision making. While AAP experts disagree with these changes and the AAP still recommends each of these immunizations for all children at the appropriate age, the following information and resources related to shared clinical decision making are being provided.
Medical Record Documentation
AAP recommends use of specific language related to shared clinical decision making in medical record documentation. Documentation is recommended that discussion about the vaccine occurred and a decision to vaccinate followed shared clinical decision making. The patient’s desire to receive the protection of vaccination should be adequate, however, notating any additional benefit to the patient is also helpful.
Use the following dot phrase (template language) as a guide:
The patient/caregiver and I engaged in shared clinical decision-making about the benefits and risks of the _________ vaccine. This discussion included an opportunity for them to ask questions. No contraindication to vaccination was identified, and the patient/caregiver and I collaboratively determined the patient would benefit from vaccination. A vaccine was ordered in the context of shared clinical decision making and educational materials were provided.
(Where relevant and applicable for patients with underlying conditions add) The patient has ________(indicate underlying condition).
Talking with Families
Parents are hearing a lot of information now — much of it is conflicting and misleading. The provider’s role is to cut through that noise and share what science shows so parents can make informed decisions with confidence alongside their pediatricians. It’s important to let families know that the vaccines currently listed as shared clinical decision making are still important and that the science behind these vaccines has not changed.
See the Clinician-Family Immunization Communications FAQs for more guidance on how to talk to families about changes to CDC’s child immunization recommendations.
Resources
AAP:
- 2026 AAP Recommended Child and Adolescent Immunization Schedule
- Family-friendly AAP Recommended Immunization Schedule
- AAP Immunization Discussion Guides
Common Health Coalition (CHC):
- Health Leader Toolkit: Navigating Changes to the Federal Childhood Immunization Schedule
- Shared Clinical Decision-Making Guide (and accompanying video)
Immunize.org:
Last Updated
02/24/2026
Source
American Academy of Pediatrics