A quiet change in federal vaccine policy could lead to a wave of sick children. A new model predicts that if fewer infants get the rotavirus vaccine, hospital beds will fill up fast. The numbers are large and the timing is close.
This matters because rotavirus is a common cause of severe diarrhea in babies and young children. Before the vaccine, it sent hundreds of thousands of kids to the hospital each year in the United States. The virus causes dehydration and can be life threatening without quick medical care.
The current vaccine is highly effective. It is given as a series of oral doses in the first year of life. Most parents know it simply as part of the routine schedule.
But here is the twist. In January 2026, US health leaders changed the recommendation for this vaccine. It moved from a routine shot to a shared decision between parents and doctors. This change may lead some families to delay or skip the vaccine.
Think of the vaccine like a locked door that keeps a virus out. When coverage drops, that door stays open more often. The virus can then move through communities like a traffic jam that suddenly clears and speeds up. More exposure means more illness.
The model used in this study is like a weather forecast for infections. It looks at how the virus spreads and how many kids might get sick if fewer are protected. It does not predict the future with certainty, but it shows what could happen under different scenarios.
Researchers ran the model for the whole United States and for individual states. They tested what would happen if vaccine coverage fell to 20 percent. They also looked at how fast hospitalizations might rise after a drop in coverage.
The study was published on April 28, 2026 on medRxiv. It is a modeling study, not a clinical trial. That means it shows potential outcomes based on assumptions, not what has already happened.
The model predicts that hospitalizations would start to climb within two to three years after a drop in vaccine use. If coverage fell to 20 percent, the United States could see over 200,000 hospitalizations between July 2026 and June 2031. That is a five year window of risk.
The burden would not be shared evenly. Southern states would likely see the highest rates of hospitalization. These areas already face higher rotavirus risk, so any drop in protection hits them harder.
This does not mean this outcome is certain.
Experts in disease modeling say these estimates help leaders plan. They show where to focus education, outreach, and support for families. They also highlight the need for clear conversations between doctors and parents.
For families, the practical step is to talk with a pediatrician. Ask about the benefits and risks of the rotavirus vaccine for your child. Discuss any concerns you have and get trusted information.
The model has limits. It relies on assumptions about how coverage might change. It cannot capture every local factor that affects disease spread. Real world behavior can shift quickly.
What happens next will depend on how families and doctors respond. Health leaders may update guidance as new data arrives. Ongoing tracking of hospitalizations will show whether the model’s predictions come true. Research takes time, and careful monitoring is the best way to protect children.