Doctors urge flu shots for toddlers

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Doctors urge flu shots for toddlers
 
Pediatrics group issues revised recommendations   Image: Immunizations Prepare Children for New School Year
The American Academy of Pediatrics is urging that children between the ages of 6 and 23 months receive flu shots.
 
 

Reuters
CHICAGO, Dec. 2 —  The American Academy of Pediatrics on Monday issued revised recommendations for flu shots, saying for the first time that youngsters between the ages of 6 and 23 months should be vaccinated.


 

     
     
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  Health Library: Flu

 
 
       THE U.S. CENTERS for Disease Control and Prevention now “encourages” such vaccinations for children in that age group but says a full recommendation on the issue won’t be made for another one to three years.
       “It recently has become clear that healthy children younger than 24 months are at as great a risk of influenza-associated hospitalization as are previously recognized high-risk groups,” the pediatrics group said.
       Young children run a higher risk of being severely impacted by the seasonal malady than do healthy adults over the age of 50, for whom routine immunization has been recommended since 2000, the policy statement added.
       Children under 6 months old should not be vaccinated for flu, it said, but those aged 6 months through 23 months should be when it is “logistically and economically feasible.”
 
 
 
 
How does the vaccine work?
The flu vaccine is an inactivated viral vaccine. This means that the viruses predicted to be predominant during the current season are grown in chicken eggs, harvested, and then killed through chemical means. The vaccine is then purified and tested for safety. When taken by humans, the vaccine stimulates the production of antibodies that fight off the viruses included in the vaccine.

Sources: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
National Foundation for Infectious Diseases
Printable version


       
       
PARENTS, TOO
       It also said parents and others in the household who come into contact with young children should be vaccinated, as should out-of-home caretakers and health care personnel.

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       Already considered at high risk and recommended for vaccination are children and adolescents with asthma, cystic fibrosis and other chronic lung and heart diseases as well as children with HIV infection, sickle cell anemia and chronic kidney or metabolic diseases such as diabetes.
       The statement — published in the December issue of Pediatrics, the group’s journal — also said priority should be given to vaccinating women who will be in their second or third trimester of pregnancy during the flu season.
       
       © 2002 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
       
       

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