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  • The vaccine schedule didn’t call for ‘72 injections’

    To defend recent changes to the childhood vaccine schedule, the Trump administration compared shots for American babies with babies in an unspecified “European Country.” 

    The Jan. 5 White House graphic showed two babies, each surrounded by needles, with the text: “European Country: 11 injections. United States: 72 injections.” It cited a recent U.S. Health and Human Services report on the 2024 U.S. childhood and adolescent immunization schedule, which shows Denmark is the graphic’s “European country.”

    (Screenshot of Instagram post)

    President Donald Trump posted the same count on Truth Social after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced it was reducing the number of vaccines routinely recommended to children. 

    Federal vaccine recommendations vary according to a person’s age and health circumstances. But this graphic featuring an infant explicitly refers to injections, so we focused on how many shots babies could have received under the former recommendation. 

    It was not 72.

    The comparison to Denmark is also faulty: It uses the most exaggerated count of “injections” for the U.S. while using the most conservative count for Denmark.

    No matter how you count, babies under 2 did not receive 72 vaccines 

    The CDC never recommended babies get 72 injections

    In 2024 and part of 2025, before the Trump administration’s changes, it recommended children up to age 2 get up to 12 different vaccines protecting against 16 diseases. 

    Some vaccines are administered in several doses. Seventy-two is around the number of routinely recommended doses — not injections — that could have been given over 18 years, beginning in infancy. Half of those doses are from annual flu and COVID-19 vaccines. 

    Doses rarely equal “injections.” That’s because many childhood vaccine doses can be delivered in combination vaccines, in which one syringe contains several vaccines. Other times, vaccines can be given orally, like the rotavirus vaccine, or via nasal spray, like the flu vaccine.  

    Under the 2024 schedule, a baby at the two-month appointment could receive all six recommended vaccine doses in two injections and one oral administration of drops, for example. 

    And it was possible, with maximum use of combination vaccines, for a 2-year-old to be fully vaccinated with as few as 12 injections and some oral drops — or up to 19 or 20 injections if they got their first course of COVID-19 and flu vaccines and an RSV vaccine.

    That said, not all clinics or providers carry every vaccine in their highest combination form. But even if a child got every vaccine dose separately under the former schedule, that would have resulted in 27 to 30 injections by age 2, plus some oral drops.

    Still, that many injections is unlikely. Dr. William Schaffner, Vanderbilt University infectious diseases professor, said he’s never heard of a child who got every vaccine purely through single doses.

    “Ideally, we want to use combination vaccines, because that reduces the number of shots,” said Dr. Flor Muñoz, a Baylor College of Medicine pediatric infectious disease doctor, when she spoke to PolitiFact in September 2025. 

    Even including young kids and teenagers, ‘72 injections’ is a stretch

    Let’s assume the graphic was referencing more than just babies. It’s still inaccurate

    From birth to age 10, under the previous schedule, the CDC recommended up to 30 vaccine doses. With maximum reliance on combination shots those doses could be delivered in as few as 14 injections and some oral drops. 

    A child who got an annual COVID-19 and flu vaccines, but opted for the flu nasal spray, could turn 10 having gotten 28 shots in arms plus oral drops. Even if counting all possible vaccines from birth to age 18, “72 injections” would be a stretch. That would require every single vaccine dose over 18 years be given as a separate shot. 

    Before recent changes, an 18-year-old who got all of CDC’s universally recommended vaccines, including COVID-19 and flu vaccines, would be protected against 18 diseases.

    By maximizing combination shots, and getting the shortest dosing series, it would have been possible to reach adulthood with 19 injections, and some oral drops.

    If the same teen got annual COVID-19 and flu vaccines, but opted for the flu nasal spray, that could add up to 41 shots by age 18; fewer are possible, depending on what month the person was born. 

    Denmark comparison propped up with misleading math

    The Trump administration’s injection comparison uses apples and oranges to make the U.S. count look high and Denmark’s low. 

    Both account for 18 years of vaccines, not just for babies. 

    The White House did not respond to our query about how the number of “injections” was calculated, but HHS appears to have reached the total of “72 injections” in the U.S. by counting each dose as a separate injection and including vaccines given as oral drops as “injections.” 

    For Denmark, HHS took combination vaccines into account, and counted several doses as a single injection, leading to the lowest possible total — “11 injections.”

    Those 11 shots include 18 total doses. Total doses are far lower in Denmark, which does not routinely vaccinate children against diseases like chickenpox, RSV, rotavirus, meningococcal disease or Hepatitis A or B. Denmark also does not recommend routine vaccination for children against influenza or COVID-19. 

    In short, the U.S. count assumes the highest possible number, while the Denmark count assumes the lowest. 

    Our ruling

    The Trump White House shared a graphic showing a baby in the U.S. getting 72 vaccine injections under the previous CDC recommended schedule. 

    But babies don’t get that many shots. Under the 2024 schedule, children could get from 12 to 30 shots before their second birthday depending on the use of combination vaccines and COVID-19 and flu shots. 

    Before age 10, that schedule recommended 30 to 52 doses. By using combination vaccines and flu nasal spray, however, they could be delivered in 14 to 28 injections. 

    Even as doses rise to a potential 72 for an 18-year-old, it’s unlikely a child would reach adulthood with every single dose given as a separate injection.

    We rate the claim that the U.S. childhood vaccine schedule previously called for babies to get “72 injections” False.

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  • Why a Small Country Leads: Korea’s Powerhouse Moment in Beauty Injectables

    Landscape: A Dense Manufacturing Base and a Broad Brand Range When clinics talk about Korean beauty innovation today, they don’t mean skincare only; they mean beauty injectable platforms that cover neuromodulators and hyaluronic acid (HA) dermal fillers for facial contouring, softening wrinkles and folds, and subtle “skin quality” edits. On the toxin side, Korean manufacturing […]

    The post Why a Small Country Leads: Korea’s Powerhouse Moment in Beauty Injectables appeared first on IFB.

    Rachel G

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  • Small children don’t get ‘80 different vaccines’

    President Donald Trump repeatedly exaggerated the number of vaccines recommended for small children, comparing it with vaccinating a horse. 

    “They give — I mean, for a little baby to be injected with that much fluid?” Trump first said Sept. 21 during an Air Force One press gaggle. “Even beyond the actual ingredients, they have sometimes 80 different vaccines … It’s like you’re shooting up a horse.” 

    He used the number four more times during a Sept. 22 press conference in which he also pushed an unproven link between autism and Tylenol.

    “You have a little child, little fragile child, that you get a vat of 80 different vaccines, I guess, 80 different blends, and they pump it in,” he said.

    Then again: “It’s like 80 different vaccines and beyond vaccines and 80. Then you give that to a little kid.”

    Sign up for PolitiFact texts

    How many vaccines do young children actually receive? It’s not 80, by any measure. 

    The White House didn’t respond to our questions about how Trump arrived at that number. But because Trump’s comments referred to “little” kids and babies, we tallied the overall number of recommended childhood vaccines for children ages 10 and under in four ways: by the number of vaccine formulations a child receives; by the number of diseases the vaccines protect against; by the total number of doses each child receives of all the recommended vaccine formulations; and by the number of physical injections or shots a child would receive if following the recommended vaccination schedule. 

    No matter how we counted, the number of vaccines a young child receives didn’t reach Trump’s claim of 80.

    CDC schedule recommends 11 vaccines for kids 10 and younger

    Over a child’s first year of life, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends seven different vaccine formulations, plus an annual flu vaccine. They are:

    • Hepatitis B

    • RSV (respiratory syncytial virus), if not yet given to the mother in pregnancy

    • DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis) 

    • Polio

    • Hib (Haemophilus influenzae type B)

    • PCV (Pneumococcal disease)

    • Rotavirus

    By age 2, children will get their first of two doses of varicella (chickenpox), hepatitis A and MMR (measles, mumps, rubella).

    By age 6, children who follow the recommended vaccination schedule and receive all doses of the 10 recommended vaccines will be fully vaccinated against 14 diseases. 

    Starting when a baby is 6 months old, annual flu vaccines are recommended with two doses the first time. That bumps the total to 11 vaccines, and 15 diseases. 

    Trump’s CDC no longer recommends annual COVID-19 vaccination for all children but patients can still receive the vaccine after consulting with a health care provider. The Food and Drug Administration, meanwhile, approved the vaccine for kids 6 months and older with underlying health conditions. 

    The American Academy of Pediatrics, which publishes its own vaccine schedule, still recommends annual COVID-19 vaccines for all people 6 months and older. If including COVID-19 vaccines, the total vaccines for children comes to 12, with some protection against 16 diseases. 

    The next batch of vaccines starts when children are 11 to 13 years old. Up to four more vaccines are recommended at this age to protect against HPV (human papillomavirus) and meningococcal types A, C, W, and Y. Children in this age group also get a tetanus, diphtheria and acellular pertussis booster called Tdap. If they are at high risk, children this age are also recommended to get the meningococcal B vaccine

    When it comes to total doses for children 10 and under, the US vaccine schedule calls for 30 to 52 

    Many childhood vaccines are not given all at once, but spread out over several doses. 

    For example, the CDC recommends three doses of the hepatitis B vaccine, one at birth, and one each at 2 and 6 months. Other vaccines are given in up to four to five separate doses. Sometimes the same vaccine can be administered in a two- or three-dose series.

    “For most vaccines, multiple doses are because we’ve shown that fewer doses than whatever is in the schedule is not fully protective,” said Dr. James Campbell, a University of Maryland pediatrician and infectious disease expert. The reasons behind timing and frequency of doses depends on the vaccine. 

    Take DTaP. The first three doses given to infants trains their immune system to recognize and defend against the infection. Those doses do create a protective response, but the more long-lasting protection comes when they get a booster as toddlers. “They make more mature, what we call memory B cells, which means long lasting protection,” said Campbell, “So if a long time after that, they were to be exposed, they would then be able to respond.”

    In the case of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, the second recommended dose isn’t meant to boost but rather catch “primary failures,” or the 2% to 7% of people who don’t get an immune response from the first dose. 

    “It’s just a matter of what induces the best immune response,” said Dr. Paul Offit, a Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia pediatrician and infectious disease expert.

    We added up all the doses recommended in the childhood vaccine schedule for kids 10 and under. Assuming the most robust dosing series (for example, opting for a four-dose series over a three-dose series), a 10-year-old could receive 30 doses of vaccines. That would be 52 doses if a child receives every single annual flu and COVID-19 vaccine, including two of each their first year. 

    The closest we got to the 80 vaccines that Trump referenced was to count every single dose of every vaccine separately, including each annual flu and COVID-19 shot from birth to age 18. That adds up to 72 doses, half of which are COVID-19 and flu, among all kids, including tweens and teenagers, not only the little kids and babies that Trump talked about. 

    Different vaccine doses are often administered together in one shot

    Fifty-two vaccine doses rarely means 52 shots in a kid’s arm. That’s because many childhood vaccine doses can be delivered in combination vaccines, in which one syringe can contain several vaccines. Other times vaccines can be given orally, like rotavirus, or via nasal spray, like the flu vaccine.  

    Here’s an example: A baby at its two-month appointment is recommended to get doses of six different vaccines. Using a combination vaccine, the child can receive all six vaccinations in the form of two injections and one oral administration by way of drops.

    “We’ve worked for a long time, over decades, to figure out which vaccines can go together in the same needle and syringe and still be safe and still immunogenic and protective, meaning you don’t have any worse protection by putting them together,” Campbell said. 

    Vaccines such as MMR are offered only as a combination in the U.S. 

    “We agree that we want to reduce the number of shots,” said Dr. Flor Muñoz, associate professor of pediatrics, infectious diseases and molecular virology at Baylor College of Medicine. “We’ve been successful at doing that with combination vaccines to protect against more diseases.”

    Using combination vaccines does not overload children’s bodies with “liquid” as Trump was concerned about though. For infants, the standard is, at most, half a milliliter to a milliliter — or about 1/10 to 1/5 of one teaspoon. “It’s tiny, and babies tolerate it perfectly fine,” Campbell said.

    Our ruling

    On multiple occasions Trump said “little” kids and “little” babies are given “80 different vaccines.”

    According to the current CDC recommended vaccine schedule, a 10-year-old child could receive up to 12 different vaccine formulations, protecting from 16 different diseases. Those vaccines could be administered in up to 52 separate doses, but almost certainly less than 52 injections because many vaccines are delivered in one shot. 

    None of those numbers equals 80 different vaccines. We rate this claim False.

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  • A Legal Battle Over Injections in SLC?! Plus ‘Salt Lake City,’ ‘Beverly Hills,’ and ‘Potomac.’

    A Legal Battle Over Injections in SLC?! Plus ‘Salt Lake City,’ ‘Beverly Hills,’ and ‘Potomac.’

    Rachel Lindsay and Jodi Walker kick off today’s Morally Corrupt with a breakdown of the piping hot tea concerning Heather Gay’s Beauty Lab + Laser and Monica Garcia’s legal battle over injections (14:09), followed by an in depth discussion of The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Season 4, Episode 9 (20:52). Then, Jodi and Rachel recap The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 13, Episode 3 (42:08), before Callie Curry returns to the pod to dish about the Real Housewives of Potomac Season 8 premiere (1:04:16).

    Host: Rachel Lindsay
    Guests: Jodi Walker and Callie Curry
    Producers: Devon Manze
    Theme Song: Devon Renaldo

    Subscribe: Spotify

    Jodi Walker

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  • America’s Teeth Grinders Are Turning to Botox

    America’s Teeth Grinders Are Turning to Botox

    With the pinch of a needle, cosmetic dermatologists such as Michele Green can make forehead wrinkles disappear and deep-furrowed crow’s-feet puff back out like yeasted dough. Botox is totally magic, a little unsettling, and very in demand: Green’s New York City practice has been swamped as Americans seek to give themselves a “post-pandemic” glow-up. But these days, many of her patients aren’t after eternal youth and sex appeal. When Green reviews her schedule for the week each Monday morning, she told me, “I’m just like, Oh my god.” At least a quarter of her Botox appointments are for people with a different motive entirely: They can’t stop clenching their jaw and grinding their teeth.

    Across the country, patients dealing with the meddlesome condition are now turning to Botox—yes, Botox.  “It’s a very popular treatment” for people who grind and clench their teeth, Lauren Goodman, a L.A.-based cosmetic nurse, told me. Bruxism, the official term encompassing both behaviors, is an involuntary action that tends to happen when people are sleeping at night, for reasons including alcohol and tobacco use, sleep apnea, and stress—perhaps why the condition has soared in the United States during the pandemic. The condition is a tolerable nuisance for many people, but the symptoms can get very real: With bruxism on the rise, dentists are reporting more chipped and cracked teeth in patients, along with jaw pain and facial soreness. In the most severe cases, patients can suffer debilitating headaches and jaw dislocation. The most common treatments, such as mouth guards and lifestyle changes, only sometimes help get rid of symptoms.

    That’s what makes Botox so appealing for the recent flood of teeth grinders. Jaw injections relax the chewing muscles that clench and grind with up to 250 pounds of force—potentially relieving pain and preventing dental issues in the process. It’s not as though every teeth grinder in America is hotfooting it to their nearest Botox clinic, but the procedure seems to have blown up since the start of the pandemic. Five dentists and cosmetic experts told me they’d noticed an increase in teeth grinders and clenchers getting Botox. People who have exhausted more traditional routes are “really just committed to alleviating their pain,” said Samantha Rawdin, a prosthodontist in New York City. “If that means getting a needle to the face, so be it.”

    But even if Botox has some upsides, it’s hardly the permanent, sure-thing solution that dentists and patients have long searched for. That’s been the narrative all along with bruxism: Because there are so many possible causes, treatments are an educated dice roll—and none of them is universally effective. “I don’t tell my patients I can treat them,” Gilles Lavigne, a dentistry professor at the University of Montreal, told me. “I tell them I can help them manage their condition.” So, how do we still not always know how to handle this incredibly common ailment?


    Botox has been creeping onto the teeth-grinding stage since long before the pandemic. Although it has gained noticeable traction over the past few years, research on the efficacy of Botox stretches back to the late 1990s. In the years since, researchers have also discovered that the injections, which temporarily paralyze the masseter muscles responsible for grinding and clenching, can reduce the frequency and intensity of bruxism. It’s one of a slew of non-cosmetic Botox uses that have been identified since the drug hit the market in 1989: Injections also treat issues such as excessive underarm sweating, acne, and migraines.

    Botox for bruxism hasn’t been FDA approved, so it’s still considered off-label—but anyone with a Botox license can legally inject a willing teeth grinder. And at least in theory, Botox has some advantages over other bruxism treatments. Night guards might prevent you from gnashing your teeth into smithereens while you sleep, but they can be ineffective at stopping the behavior and can even make it worse—especially if you have sleep apnea, Jamison Spencer, a dentist and sleep-apnea expert based in Boise, Idaho, told me. Minimally invasive regimes such as yoga, meditation, cognitive behavioral therapy, and physical therapy are hit or miss. Muscle relaxers can be helpful for some patients, but those aren’t universally popular among the dentists I spoke with, some of whom cited America’s opioid crisis as a concern.

    When less invasive treatments don’t work, Botox might be “the next frontier,” Leena Palomo, a professor at New York University’s College of Dentistry, told me. Grinders and clenchers seem to be learning about the injections from a variety of sources. Rita Mizrahi, an oral surgeon in New York who offers Botox for bruxism, told me that her patients are typically referred by their regular dentists. Others discover jaw Botox in online forums such as Reddit and the beauty network RealSelf, where often anonymous discussions of the procedure abound. And some are reading mainstream-media testimonials or hearing about it from friends or family—particularly as more and more Americans embrace Botox for cosmetic purposes.

    At its best, the procedure can really help certain teeth grinders: Studies have indicated that Botox can decrease pain levels. One RealSelf reviewer described trying night guards, stress relief, and cutting out caffeine before getting jaw injections. “Thank goodness for something like Botox to come along in this day and age,” they wrote four months after getting the procedure. The procedure comes with some cosmetic changes too: Grinding and clenching all night can be a workout, which might lead to enlarged chewing muscles and a square, boxy face. The injections slim the jawline for many patients, giving it “more of a V-shape,” Green said.

    But Botox has some real downsides—and plenty of dentists are still hesitant to recommend it. For starters, it’s expensive and impermanent. The procedure typically costs at least $1,000; is not covered by medical or dental insurance; and usually won’t last for more than four months. “This isn’t a onetime thing and you’re good,” Mizrahi said. And like most of the other treatments available, jaw Botox attacks teeth-grinding and clenching symptoms, but not the cause. Because people still need to chew, the masseter muscle isn’t totally immobilized—meaning that patients “will just grind with less power,” Lavigne said.

    And all of the risks associated with the cosmetic use of Botox apply here too, such as bruising at the injection site, headaches, allergic reactions, and less desirable changes in facial expressions due to misplaced Botox. One RealSelf reviewer experienced no improvement in jaw pain but the unfortunate onset of a creepy grin that resembled a “chucky doll smile.” Another said that their headaches disappeared after the procedure, but so did their cheeks: “I couldn’t recognize myself in the mirror and looked like I had aged 10 years within a couple of months.”

    That grinders and clenchers are more frequently turning to Botox is hardly a pure success story. Early mentions of teeth gnashing exist in the Bible, yet we still don’t really understand how to make it stop. I know firsthand how frustrating that feels. In January, after trying (and failing) to open wide enough for a crispy chicken tender, I was finally motivated to see a dentist—who gave me a night guard so I’d quit slamming my teeth together. I meditate like it’s my job, I don’t have sleep apnea or take medications of any sort, and yet I still gnaw on that hunk of plastic like it’s gristle. My jaw doesn’t lock anymore but it’s still tense most mornings. I’m priced out of getting Botox—so, like many teeth grinders, I’m stuck in medical purgatory.

    Teeth grinding isn’t like a broken arm, where cause and effect are obvious and fixable. “Because the origin of [jaw] pain is not singular, you have to attack it from various modalities,” Mizrahi told me: “All the things that potentially contribute to the pain have to be addressed,” and that can involve fields far outside dentistry. Even dentists themselves aren’t always equipped with all the information: “We get virtually no bruxism education” in dental school, Spencer, the sleep-apnea researcher from Idaho, said.

    With all these roadblocks, many patients never find out why they’re clenching or grinding, says Alan Glaros, an emeritus professor of dentistry at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, who’s been researching the issue for more than 40 years. That’s partially because it’s a difficult problem to not only treat, but also study. Bruxism’s many causes intersect “a lot of disciplines,” such as dentistry, sleep health, and psychology, which muddies the research process. Each field is studying the behavior, but the results will only ever tell part of the story. “People act as if this is all solved, but it’s not,” Glaros told me.

    So for now, mouth guards, meditation, and Botox are what we have. The treatment, in all likelihood, isn’t going anywhere. “As people get to know others who have responded well, I predict that we’re going to see an uptick,” Palomo said. Grinders and clenchers will keep chomping on their plastic night guards or forking up thousands of dollars a year for temporary injections, all in a maybe-successful attempt to quell their pain. If only Botox could banish bruxism like it does stubborn wrinkles.

    Ali Francis

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