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Vaccine recommendations for infants and children |
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In 1983,
The
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
(ACIP) published the
first immunization schedule for children. At that time, the
immunization schedule was relatively simple. During the 1990s, the
childhood schedule became more complex as new immunizations became
available. Over the past decade, the addition of new vaccines, such
as
varicella, pneumococcal
conjugate and rotavirus
vaccines, and changes to existing vaccines, such as polio, has made
it increasingly more difficult for providers and parents to stay
abreast of childhood immunization recommendations.
Beginning in 1995, the ACIP, the
American Academy of Pediatrics
and the
American Academy of Family
Physicians began
publishing an annual childhood immunization schedule.
The 2008 Recommended Childhood and Adolescent Immunization Schedules
contain several important changes from the previous year. The
importance of the birth dose of
hepatitis B is again emphasized, and the use of new combination
vaccines is clarified. Recommendations are for all adolescents to
receive tetanus, diphtheria and acellular
pertussis vaccine (Tdap) and
meningococcal vaccine (MCV4),
and for all adolescent girls to receive
human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine. Recommendations for the
influenza vaccine have been broadened to include all children 6
months through 18 years of age.
A
catch-up schedule
(pdf) is provided for
children who have been delayed in receiving their immunizations.
Parents can view an immunization schedule based on their child’s
birth date on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
website, which also provides an
online
immunization scheduler for parents.
Using the Recommended Childhood and Adolescent Immunization
Schedules in daily practice can be tricky. Fortunately, the
Immunization Action Coalition provides a helpful summary of the
current immunization recommendations. This document, the
Summary for Childhood Immunization Rules (pdf), is updated
yearly.
In an effort to improve immunization coverage levels
in the state of New Mexico, the New Mexico Clinical Prevention
Initiative Childhood Immunizations Workgroup derived an ACIP-compatible
schedule called
Done By One.
The DBO schedule emphasizes immunizing children based on minimum
intervals and eliminates the long-acceptable windows during which
some immunizations are given. For example, the third
doses of
IPV
and hepatitis B are given at
6 months of age. The fourth doses of
DTaP,
Hib and PCV7
are
recommended at 12 months of age. When using this schedule providers
must ensure that six months have elapsed between the third and
fourth doses of DTaP. Although some providers may have less choice
when vaccines are administered and children will receive more
vaccines at their one-year visit, widespread use of the DBO schedule
has dramatically improved New Mexico’s immunization coverage level.
In 2004, 83.5 percent of children had received 4 DTaP, 3 Polio, 1
MMR, 3 Hib and 3 HepB vaccines, compared to 75.2 percent in 2003.
To stay abreast of new recommendations and to promote
timely immunization of children, providers should post copies of the
current year’s immunization schedule in workstation areas and in
patient exam rooms. The updated schedules are usually published in
Morbidity and
Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) and
Pediatrics
in January every year.
Click here to view the 2008 schedules.
 
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