Child Immunization Program
Child Immunization Program
Child Immunization Program
IMMUNIZATION
PROGRAMS
What Is Immunization?
● Immunization is the ● Immunity (protection) by
process of giving a immunization is similar to
vaccine to a person to the immunity a person
protect them against would get from disease, but
disease. instead of getting the
disease you get a vaccine.
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BRIEF HISTORY OF
IMMUNIZATION
Edward Jenner
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When should my child get immunized?
• Children should get immunized during their first two
years of life. Your child may need several doses of the
vaccines to be fully protected.
• For example, healthcare providers recommend that
children receive their first dose of MMR (measles,
mumps, rubella) vaccination at 12 months of age or
older and a second dose prior to elementary school
entry (around 4 to 6 years of age).
• Children can get the vaccines at regularly scheduled
well visits.
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Vaccine: BCG ( Bacille Calmette-Guérin)
Protection from: Tuberculosis
When to give: At birth
Route: Intradermal (ID) injection.
Tuberculosis (TB) is an infection that most often attacks the lungs. In infants and
young children, it affects other organs like the brain. A severe case could cause
serious complications or death.
TB is very difficult to treat when contracted, and treatment is lengthy and not
always successful. According to the
2020 World Health Organization global TB report, the Philippines has the highest
TB incidence rate in Asia, with 554 cases for every 100,000 Filipinos.
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Vaccine: Hepatitis B
Protection from: Hepatitis B
When to give: At birth
Route: Intramuscular injection
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Vaccine: Pentavalent vaccine
Protection from: Diphtheria, Pertussis, Tetanus, Influenza B and
Hepatitis B
When to give: 6, 10 and 14 weeks
Route:
Diphtheria infects the throat and tonsils, making it hard for children to
breathe and swallow. Severe cases can cause heart, kidney and/or
nerve damage.
Pertussis (whooping cough) causes coughing spells that can last for
weeks. In some cases, it can lead to troubled breathing, pneumonia,
and death.
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Tetanus causes very painful muscle contractions. It can cause children’s
neck and jaw muscles to lock (lockjaw), making it hard for them to open
their mouth, swallow, breastfeed or breathe. Even with treatment, tetanus is
often fatal.
80–90% of infants infected with Hepatitis B during the first year of life
most likely to develop chronic infections.
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Vaccine: Oral Polio Vaccine
When to give: 6, 10 and 14 weeks
Vaccine: Inactivated polio vaccine
When to give: 14 weeks
Protection from: Poliovirus
Polio is a virus that paralyzes 1 in 200 people who get infected.
Among those cases, 5 to 10 per cent die when their breathing
muscles are paralyzed. There is no cure for polio once the paralysis
sets in.
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Vaccine: PCV (Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine)
When to give: 6, 10 and 14 weeks
Protection from: Pneumonia and Meningitis
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Vaccine: MMR (Measles, Mumps and Rubella
)
When to give: 9 months and 1 year old
Protection from: Measles, Mumps and Rubella
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