“Super Worrisome”: More Parents Declining Newborn Preventive Care Amid Rising Medical Mistrust

In this photo provided by Norton Healthcare, nurse Robin Waldridge administers a Vitamin K shot to a newborn baby at Norton Women's and Children's Hospital on Friday, March 6, 2026, at the hospital in Louisville, Ky. (Jamie Rhodes/Norton Healthcare via AP)

One day at an Idaho hospital, half the newborns Dr. Tom Patterson saw didn’t get the vitamin K shots that have been given to babies for decades to prevent potentially deadly bleeding. On another recent day, more than a quarter didn’t get the shot. Their parents wouldn’t allow it.

“When you look at a child who’s innocent and vulnerable — and a simple intervention that’s been done since 1961 is refused — knowing that baby’s going out into the world is super worrisome to me,” said Patterson, who’s been a pediatrician for nearly three decades.

Doctors across the nation are alarmed that skepticism fueled by rising anti-science sentiment and medical mistrust is increasingly reaching beyond vaccines to other proven, routine, preventive care for babies.

A recent study in the Journal of the American Medical Association, which analyzed more than 5 million births nationwide, found that refusals of vitamin K shots nearly doubled between 2017 and 2024, from 2.9% to 5.2%. Other research suggests that parents who decline vitamin K shots are much more likely to refuse getting their newborns the hepatitis B vaccine and an eye ointment to prevent potentially blinding infections. Rates for that vaccination at birth dropped in recent years, and doctors confirm that more parents are refusing the eye medication.

“I do think these families care deeply about their infants,” said Dr. Kelly Wade, a Philadelphia neonatologist. “But I hear from families that it’s hard to make decisions right now because they’re hearing conflicting information.”

Innumerable social media posts question doctors’ advice on safe and effective measures like vitamin K and eye ointment. And the Trump administration has repeatedly undermined established science. A federal advisory committee whose members were appointed by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — a leading anti-vaccine activist before joining the administration — voted to end the longstanding recommendation to immunize all babies against hepatitis B right after birth. On Monday a federal judge temporarily blocked all decisions made by the reconfigured committee.

One common thread that ties together anti-vaccine views and growing sentiments against other protective measures for newborns is the fallacy that natural is always better than artificial, said Dr. David Hill, a Seattle pediatrician and researcher.

“Nature will allow 1 in 5 human infants to die in the first year of life,” Hill said, “which is why generations of scientists and doctors have worked to bring that number way, way down.”

Vitamin K and other measures prevent serious problems

Babies are born with low levels of vitamin K, leaving them vulnerable because their intestines can’t produce enough until they start eating solid foods at around 6 months old.

“Vitamin K is important for helping the blood clot and preventing dangerous bleeding in babies, like bleeding into the brain,” said Dr. Kristan Scott of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, lead author of the JAMA study.

Before injections became routine, up to about 1 in 60 babies suffered vitamin K deficiency bleeding, which can also affect the gastrointestinal tract. Today the condition is rare, but research shows that newborns who don’t get a vitamin K shot are 81 times more likely to develop severe bleeding than those who do.

Hill has seen what can happen.

“I cared for a toddler whose parents had chosen that risk,” the Seattle doctor said. The child essentially had a stroke as a newborn and wound up with severe developmental delays and ongoing seizures.

At a February meeting of the Idaho chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, doctors said they knew of eight deaths from vitamin K deficiency bleeding in the state over the preceding 13 months, said Patterson, who is president of the chapter.

Infections prevented by other newborn measures can also have grave consequences. Erythromycin eye ointment protects against gonorrhea that can be contracted during birth and potentially cause blindness if untreated. The hepatitis B vaccine prevents a disease that can lead to liver failure, liver cancer or cirrhosis.

Even if a pregnant woman is tested for gonorrhea and hepatitis B, no test is perfect, and she may get infected after testing, said Dr. Susan Sirota, a pediatrician in Highland Park, Illinois. Either way, she risks passing the infection to her child.

Why are parents refusing routine care?

Parents give many reasons for turning down preventive measures, like fearing they might cause problems and not wanting newborns to feel pain.

“Some will just say they want more of a natural birth philosophy,” said Dr. Steven Abelowitz, founder of Ocean Pediatrics in Orange County, California. “Then there’s a ton of misinformation. … There are outside influences, friends, celebrities, nonprofessionals and political agendas.”

Abelowitz practices in an area with about an equal mix of Republicans and Democrats.

“There’s more mistrust from the conservative side, but there’s plenty on the more liberal side as well,” he said, “It’s across-the-board mistrust.”

Social media provides ample fuel, spreading myths and pushing unregulated vitamin K drops that doctors warn babies can’t absorb well.

Doctors in numerous states say parents refusing vitamin K shots often also decline other measures. Sirota, in Illinois, encountered a family that refused a heel stick to monitor glucose for a baby at high risk for having potentially life-threatening low blood sugar.

Care refusals aren’t a new phenomenon. Wade, in Philadelphia, said she’s seen them for 20 years. But until recently, they were rare.

Twelve years ago, Dana Morrison, now a Minnesota doula, declined the vitamin K shot for her newborn son, giving him oral drops instead.

“It came from a space of really wanting to protect the bonding time with my baby,” she said. “I was trying to eliminate more pokes.”

Her daughter’s birth a couple of years later was less straightforward, leaving the infant with a bruised leg. Morrison got the vitamin K shot for her.

Knowing what she does now, she said, she would have gotten it for her son, too.

Doctors and parents want ‘the best for their children’

Doctors hope to change minds, one parent at a time. And that begins with respect.

“If I walk into the room with judgment, we are going to have a really useless conversation,” Hill said. “Every parent I serve wants the best for their children.”

When parents question the need for the vitamin K shot, Dr. Heather Felton tries to address their specific concerns. She explains why it’s given and the risks of not getting it. Most families decide to get it, said Felton, who has seen no uptick in refusals.

“It really helps that you can take that time and really listen and be able to provide some education,” said Felton, a pediatrician at Norton Children’s in Louisville, Kentucky.

In Idaho, Patterson sometimes finds himself clearing up misconceptions. Some parents will agree to a vitamin K shot when they find out it’s not a vaccine, for example.

These conversations can take time, especially since the parents doctors see in hospitals usually aren’t people they know through their practices.

But doctors are happy to invest that time if it might save babies.

“I end every discussion with parents with this: ‘Please understand at the end of the day, I’m passionate about this because I have the best interest of children in my mind and heart,’” Patterson said. “I understand this is a hot topic, and I don’t want to disrespect anybody. But at the same time, I’m desperately saddened that we’re losing babies for no reason.”

(AP)

4 Responses

  1. I don’t think people have an issue with vitmen k shot per say as viteman k is a vitemen and found also in formula,
    Also I would say that people are not worried about vitemen k or any vaccine for that matter but the aluminum and other additives that added to vaccines.
    This is what aluminum does to the body:

    Aluminum exposure primarily affects the body through toxic accumulation, normally aluminum that is exposed through the digestive tract does not get absorbed into the blood steam but aluminum that goes directly into the blood stream bypasses the blood brain barrier: .

    Link to Colic
    In infants, aluminum exposure is strongly associated with colic, particularly through high levels in infant formulas, especially soy-based ones (up to 117 mg in the first six months). (Also vaccines) The condition is believed to stem from aluminum-induced intestinal irritation, inflammation, and impaired gut barrier function, leading to discomfort and excessive crying. The same mechanisms may explain why infants with colic often show symptoms like flatulence, indigestion, and digestive problems.

    Link to Eczema
    Aluminum exposure may contribute to eczema (atopic dermatitis) through:

    Immune system dysregulation, including increased allergic sensitization and inflammation.
    Skin barrier disruption, where aluminum can impair the skin’s protective function and enhance allergen penetration.
    Systemic inflammation from gut dysbiosis and increased intestinal permeability (“leaky gut”), which may trigger or worsen skin conditions like eczema.

    Aluminum disrupts neurotransmitter systems, synaptic plasticity, and mitochondrial function, contributing to motor neuron damage. It also induces oxidative stress, inflammation, and cytoskeletal abnormalities, which impair neuromuscular signaling and lead to muscle weakness and poor tone.
    Low muscle tone may also result from neuronal degeneration in the motor cortex and spinal cord, as seen in animal models where aluminum adjuvants caused motor neuron loss.

    Low muscle tone,
    Colic, eczema

  2. These are just some of the side affects of aluminum exposure. I understand vaccines are necessary but aluminum exposure has a lot of side affects

  3. “Aluminum encephalopathy—a neurological syndrome from aluminum neurotoxicity—includes symptoms such as cognitive impairment, motor dysfunction, pyramidal tract signs, dementia, and microcytic anemia. A 55-year-old woman with chronic exposure to marine-grade paints (30% aluminum) developed progressive dementia, cerebellar ataxia, and low muscle tone with dystonic posturing and polyminimyoclonus.
    In a 28-year-old male exposed to aluminum fumes in railway work, spastic quadriparesis and proximal muscle weakness were prominent, with hypotonia and mild atrophy in lower limbs, indicating myelopathy due to aluminum intoxication—possibly the first reported human case.
    Aluminum disrupts neurotransmitter systems, synaptic plasticity, and mitochondrial function, contributing to motor neuron damage. It also induces oxidative stress, inflammation, and cytoskeletal abnormalities, which impair neuromuscular signaling and lead to muscle weakness and poor tone”

  4. Refusing the eye ointment is not like refusing the other interventions. The “potentially blinding infections” referenced in this article can only be contracted under very specific circumstances, and they are tested for during pregnancy and at the hospital.
    Part of the reason for the increase in declining interventions is due to trends on social media, and part of it is due to distrust of the public health establishment, which has not done a good job of communicating the reasons for its recommendations, and sometimes fails to acknowledge that not every recommendation is necessary in each individual scenario.
    The result is parents declining vitamin K, which saves lives, and the hepatitis B vaccine, which can also be lifesaving.

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