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Notes -
Do you have specific examples? The US schedule is mostly met with the standard childhood vaccines. I got all the recommended ones when I was a child, and it looks at a quick glance that HPV and chickenpox are the only new additions there. Beyond childhood, I think tetanus and the flu are the only ones recommended regularly. I've had to get some fun bonus ones for international travel, too. I'm pretty sure I'm up to date on most everything (except the COVID boosters), although I didn't ever really set out to get a bunch of shots for fun. If I were much older (or made certain, um, "lifestyle choices") I'd be missing a few.
I'm a little older than you maybe. At a minimum, I never got these as a kid.
Hep A / Hep B / RV / Meningitis / HPV / Hib / PCV / Chicken pox
Here's a full list. I'm not exactly sure when everything was added but chances are you don't have a lot of this stuff. PCV, for example, was introduced in 2000.
https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/hcp/imz-schedules/child-adolescent-age.html
I had to look it up a while back, but my (urban) school district required Hep A/B (and it was at least generally recommended at the time) and I recall many universities required meningitis vaccination when I was applying. Both of those may have been fairly recent at the time. I think you're right about PCV.
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