AAP updates vaccine recommendations 2011
By Jenifer Goodwin
HealthDay Reporter
TUESDAY, Feb. 1 (HealthDay News) -- Teenagers need a booster shot to protect them from meningococcal meningitis, a potentially deadly infection of the tissue around the brain, while all kids should have up-to-date whooping cough vaccines in light of recent outbreaks, according to new recommendations from pediatric experts.
The American Academy of Pediatrics issues updated vaccination guidelines annually. Its new schedule, released Feb. 1 in the journal Pediatrics, is very similar to last year's recommendations.
Yet even without major changes, pediatricians said the revised schedule is a good opportunity to remind parents to make sure their children's vaccines are up to date.
"Immunizations have been the most effective medical preventive measure ever developed, but some people who live in the United States right now don't appreciate how tremendously protected they've been because of vaccines," said Dr. Michael Brady, chairman of the American Academy of Pediatrics' committee on infectious disease.
"There are still children around the world dying of measles and polio. The vaccination schedules are designed to get vaccines to the child before they are at the greatest risk," he added.
Among this year's recommendations:
"Influenza can be a very, very serious disease, and it results in significant deaths every year," Brady said. "People get worried about the elderly, but children 2 years old or less have rates of hospitalization that are higher than the elderly."
Children aged 6 months to 8 years vaccinated for the first time, or those who only had one dose of a previous flu vaccine, need two doses of the 2010-2011 seasonal flu vaccine, the guidelines say.
"In the last 10 years, the number of pertussis cases has increased dramatically. Many children, especially very young ones, have needed to be treated for pertussis in the hospital and some have even died," said Dr. Henry Bernstein, chief of general pediatrics at the Cohen Children's Medical Center of New York and a member of the AAP committee.
Children are supposed to get immunized at 2, 4 and 6 months and between 15 and 18 months and get a booster around age 5, usually with a three-vaccine formulation known as DTaP (diptheria, tetanus and pertussis). Children aged 11 to 12 should also have a booster because the vaccine's effectiveness wanes over time. This year, the AAP recommends that kids 7 to 11 who are behind on their pertussis immunizations also get a booster.
The AAP guidelines were approved by the American Academy of Family Physicians and the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices.
More information
The
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more on the vaccine
schedule.
