Immunisation schedule Flashcards
What vaccines are given under 1 year of age and when?
8 weeks
6-in-1 vaccine
Rotavirus vaccine
MenB
12 weeks
6-in-1 vaccine (2nd dose)
Rotavirus vaccine (2nd dose)
Pneumococcal (PCV) vaccine
16 weeks
6-in-1 vaccine (3rd dose)
MenB (2nd dose)
What is in the 6 in 1 vaccine?
Hib disease (Haemophilus influenzae type b)
Hepatitis B
Pertussis
Polio
Diphtheria
Tetanus
What are the oral, live attenuated vaccines?
PRT
Oral Polio
Oral Rotavirus
Oral Thypoid
What vaccines is given inbetween 1 year AND 3 year and 4 months?
1 year
- Pneumococcal (PCV) vaccine (2nd dose)
- MenB (3rd dose)
- MenC/Hib (1st dose)
- MMR (1st dose)
2 to 10 years
- Flu vaccine (every year)
3 years and 4 months
- MMR (2nd dose)
- 4-in-1 pre-school booster
What vaccine is given 12-14 years?
12 to 13 years
HPV vaccine
14 years
3-in-1 teenage booster
MenACWY
What are examples of inactivated toxin vaccines?
Tetanus
Diphtheria
Pertussis
What are the at risk group vaccines when born?
- Babies born to mothers who have Hepatitis B
Hepatitis B vaccine at birth, 4 weeks and 12 months - Country of high TB cases/Grandparents born in high TB country
BCG tuberculosis (TB) vaccine at birth -
6 months to 17 years old with long-term health conditions
Children’s flu vaccine every year
What are the contraindications to MMR?
Severe immunosuppression
Allergy to neomycin
Children who have received another live vaccine by injection within 4 weeks
Pregnancy should be avoided for at least 1 month following vaccination
Immunoglobulin therapy within the past 3 months (there may be no immune response to the measles vaccine if antibodies are present)
What is the acronym for the vaccine schedule?