Red Book®, 33rd Edition provides the latest clinical guidance on the manifestations, etiology, epidemiology, diagnosis, andtreatment of more than 200 childhood infectious diseases. Find the latest information about vaccines, emerging novel diseases, diagnostic modalities, and treatment recommendations from the combined expertise of the CDC, the FDA, the NIH, and hundreds of physician contributors.
New in the 2024 Red Book
All chapters were assessed for relevance in the dynamic environment that is the practice of pediatric medicine today, and every chapter has been modified since the last edition.
Significantly revised Discussing Vaccines With Patients and Parents chapter.
Two new chapters on COVID-19 and Mpox have been added.
Greatly expanded tables, figures and algorithms enable quick access to essential information.
The Systems-Based Treatment Table has been reordered so that the grouped recommendations by body system are more easily and quickly accessed.
Standardized approaches to disease prevention through immunizations, antimicrobial prophylaxis, and infection-control practices have been updated throughout the Red Book.
References to evidence-based policy recommendations have been updated throughout the Red Book.
Appropriate chapters throughout the Red Book have been updated to be consistent with 2024 AAP and CDC vaccine recommendations, CDC recommendations for immunization of healthcare personnel, and drug recommendations from 2024 Nelsons Pediatric Antimicrobial Therapy.
The Breastfeeding and Human Milk chapter was updated to align with information in the 2022 AAP policy statement on breastfeeding.
David W. Kimberlin MD FAAP is the Editor of the 2021 AAP Report of the Committee on Infectious Diseases (Red Book). He also was Editor of the 2015 and 2018 editions and was an Associate Editor of the 2012 and 2009 editions and served on the AAP Committee on Infectious Diseases from 2005- 2011. Dr. Kimberlin is the Sergio Stagno MD. Endowed Chair in Infectious Diseases Professor and Co-Division Director Vice Chair for Clinical and Translational Research. His clinical and research interests include pediatric infectious diseases antiviral therapeutics in rare diseases with a large unmet medical need including neonatal herpes simplex virus (HSV) infections congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease congenital Zika infection neonatal and infantile influenza infection and neonatal enteroviral sepsis syndrome.Elizabeth D. Barnett MD FAAP is an Associate Editor of the 2021 Red Book and was a member of the Committee on Infectious Diseases from 2014 - 2020. Dr. Elizabeth Barnett is Professor of Pediatrics at Boston University School of Medicine and Chief Section of Pediatric Infectious Diseases in the Department of Pediatrics at Boston Medical Center. She leads the Refugee Health Assessment Program and the Pediatric Travel Clinic. Her clinical and research interests include vaccines and vaccine safety refugee and immigrant medicine travel medicine and general pediatric infectious diseases.Ruth Lynfield MD FAAP is an Associate Editor of the 2021 Red Book and has been a member of the Committee on Infectious Diseases since 2015. Dr. Lynfield is the State Epidemiologist and Medical Director at the Minnesota Department of Health. She leads Minnesotas component of CDCs Emerging Infections Program Active Bacterial Core Surveillance System influenza projects and healthcare-associated infections projects. She is also Adjunct Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology and Community Health at the University of Minnesota. Her clinical and research interests include pediatric infectious diseases antimicrobial resistance and antimicrobial stewardship emerging infections prevention and control of infectious diseases and outbreak response.Mark Sawyer MD FAAP is an Associate Editor of the 2021 Red Book and served on the Committee on Infectious Diseases from 2013- 2019. Dr. Sawyer is an infectious disease specialist at Rady Children's Hospital and a professor of clinical pediatrics at UC San Diego. Additionally Dr. Sawyer is vice chair for education in the UC San Diego Department of Pediatrics and the program director for the UC San Diego/Rady Children's Pediatric Residency Program and the medical director of the UC San Diego Immunization Partnership. His clinical and research interests include pediatric infectious diseases medical education training and working with public health on the delivery of vaccines and national vaccine policy.