Experts say the new recommendation could lead to clinicians not carrying the product.
The conversation around vaccines overall is creating confusion among parents on a variety of vaccines for their children.
READ MORE | CDC panel abandons COVID vaccine recommendation, saying it's personal choice
The American Academy of Pediatrics said the impact of the CDC recommendations on child vaccines are having a real time effect.
"Today, I heard from a colleague seeing patients in primary care about a parent refusing MMR vaccine," DR. Sean O'Leary with the American Academy of Pediatrics said.
Chicago mom and healthcare attorney Anjali Dooley said she worries that the wrong information about the safety of vaccines is spreading.
"There hasn't been any real besides COVID, any real pandemics. But we're seeing more and more of that as more parents are not vaccinating their children," Dooley said.
"I think the new pressure for new moms is very, very unfound, to be honest, when there's data there that says that it's, it's for years, it's been good to have these vaccinations done," Dooley said.
In addition to no longer recommending the COVID vaccine, the panel voted to delay a vote on whether to stop recommending the Hepatitis B vaccine for newborns.
The panel argued the changes will improve children's safety, meanwhile, others disagree.
"Hepatitis B vaccines have been a substantial public health success," Dr. Larry Kociolek, Lurie's vice president of System Preparedness, Prevention and Response said. "The largest concern right now is that there's a lot of solutions being presented that don't have problems. "
This comes after the panel voted Thursday to change a recommendation on the combined measles, mumps, rubella, varicella, also known as the MMRV vaccine, supporting separate instead of combined MMR and varicella shots under the age of 4.
"I do worry that parents may choose to defer one of those vaccines to avoid those two separate injections at that visit, which could leave that child at risk for one of those potentially deadly viruses," Dr. Kociolek said.
"When I was a young, young mom, that was what you did. You got vaccinated. You vaccinated your children. You take care of your children. Because to me, this is not taking care of our children," Mother Margaret Benvenuto said.
The American Academy Pediatrics was asked if they would take any legal action if the vaccines for children's program would not be able to provide the COVID vaccines, they said it's possible that could be added to a number of lawsuits already in the works.