Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be mostly cloudy with a high of 25. Sunrise is 7:16 and sunset is 4:20 for 9 hours 4 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 42.9 percent of its visible disk illuminated.
On this day in 2000, the United States Supreme Court releases its decision in Bush v. Gore.
Wisconsin health officials have sensibly ignored a loud faction’s campaign against childhood vaccinations:
Wisconsin health officials say all babies should be vaccinated against hepatitis B at birth despite a recent change from federal vaccine advisers.
Last week, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommended that babies receive the hepatitis B shot in the first 24 hours of life if their mothers tested positive for the virus or if the mothers’ status is unknown. The recommendation, which goes to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, says women who test negative for the virus should talk to their doctors about the vaccine.
Dr. Ryan Westergaard, chief medical officer at the Wisconsin Department of Health Services, said Thursday that decades of evidence supports hepatitis B vaccination as a safe and effective strategy to protect infants.
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Hepatitis B is a serious viral infection that affects the liver, and can lead to lifelong disease including liver failure and cancer. Up to 90 percent of infants who are infected will develop chronic liver disease. But in adults, an infection can be asymptomatic. Roughly half of people with hepatitis B don’t know they carry the virus.
Since the universal birth dose recommendation was adopted in the 1990s, pediatric hepatitis B infections have declined by 99 percent, according to Westergaard. He said there were no cases in Wisconsin newborns last year, and the state has seen between 0 and 2 cases annually over the last decade.
“That success reflects a simple, reliable approach that aims to protect every baby, including when screening and follow up doesn’t go perfectly in the real world,” Westergaard told reporters.
See Hope Kirwan, Wisconsin reaffirms support of hepatitis B vaccine for newborns, defying federal advisers (‘CDC advisory committee voted last week to end recommendation of a universal birth dose. But state health officials are directing Wisconsin doctors to carry on with the 30-year standard of care’), Wisconsin Public Radio, December 11, 2025.
Hiker mired in quicksand in Utah’s Arches National Park is rescued unharmed:


