Vaccination Schedule for Children: Facts on Types of Vaccines (original) (raw)

Why do we need vaccines?

None of us wants to see our children get sick. If we could, we would protect them from any illness, no matter how small, even the sniffles.

Now suppose you could make your child safe from some of the most deadly diseases in history. Suppose that at the same time you could also help protect your neighbors' children and other children around the country from the same diseases. Finally, you could actually help to rid the world of some of these diseases that have been crippling and killing children for centuries.

You can do all of these things with one of the easiest and yet most powerful health tools ever developed. You can make sure you immunize your children.

How do vaccines work?

When you receive a vaccine, it helps your body to create antibodies. Antibodies are the body's defenses that fight off any foreign substances (germs). Although your body can create antibodies on its own, many of the vaccine-preventable diseases cause severe illness and even death before your body can produce enough antibodies.

Immunization (vaccination) schedule

Vaccines work best when given at certain ages. For example, health care professionals do not usually administer the measles vaccine until a child is at least 1 year old. If a child receives the measles vaccine earlier than that, it may not work as well. On the other hand, the DTaP vaccine should be given over a period of time in a series of properly spaced doses. More information about the specific diseases your child is vaccinated against is listed later in this article.

Following is a description of the routine childhood immunization schedule. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) publishes the schedule each year.

Hepatitis B vaccine:

  1. First dose at birth before discharge from the hospital
  2. Second dose at 1 to 2 months
  3. Third dose at 6 to 18 months

Hib vaccine:

  1. First dose at 2 months
  2. Second dose at 4 months
  3. Third dose at 6 months (depending upon type of Hib vaccine given)
  4. Fourth dose at 12 to 15 months

Inactivated polio vaccine (IPV):

  1. First dose at 2 months
  2. Second dose at 4 months
  3. Third dose at 6 to 18 months
  4. Fourth dose at 4 to 6 years

DTaP vaccine:

  1. First dose at 2 months
  2. Second dose at 4 months
  3. Third dose at 6 months
  4. Fourth dose at 15 to 18 months
  5. Fifth dose at 4 to 6 years
  6. Health care professionals recommend that children receive the Tdap at 11 years of age. In certain U.S. states (for example, California), entry into seventh grade requires receipt of the Tdap vaccination.

Pneumococcal vaccine:

  1. First dose at 2 months
  2. Second dose at 4 months
  3. Third dose at 6 months
  4. Fourth dose at 12 to 18 months

Rotavirus vaccine:

  1. First dose at 2 months
  2. Second dose at 4 months
  3. Third dose at 6 months (depending upon type of rotavirus vaccine given)

Hepatitis A vaccine:

  1. First dose at 12 to 23 months
  2. Second dose at 6 to 18 months after the first dose

Influenza vaccine:

  1. First dose at 6 months (requires a booster one month after initial vaccine if less than 9 years of age)
  2. Annually after that

MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella) vaccine:

  1. First dose at 12 to 15 months
  2. Second dose at 4 to 6 years

Varicella (chickenpox) vaccine:

  1. First dose at 12 to 15 months
  2. Second dose at 4 to 6 years

Meningococcal vaccine (Men ACWY):

  1. First dose at 11 years
  2. Second dose at 16 years

Meningococcal B vaccine:

  1. First dose at 16-18 years
  2. Second dose six months after the first dose

Human papillomavirus vaccine (two schedules):

If first dose given before 15 years:

  1. First dose at 11 years
  2. Second dose six months after first dose

If first does given after 15 years:

  1. Second dose two months after first dose
  2. Third dose six months after first dose

SLIDESHOW Childhood Diseases: Measles, Mumps, & More See Slideshow

What should you do if your child misses a shot?

For most vaccines, it is never too late to catch up on missed shots. Children who missed their first shots at 2 months of age can start later. Children who have received some of their shots and then fallen behind schedule can catch up without having to start over. If you have children who were not immunized when they were infants, or who have gotten behind schedule, contact your doctor or the health department clinic. They will help you get your children up to date on their immunizations.

(NOTE: Don't postpone your child's immunizations just because you know he or she can catch up later. Every month a child goes without scheduled immunizations is a month that the child is unprotected from vaccine-preventable diseases.)

Combination vaccines

A combination vaccine is more than one vaccine contained in a single shot. Doctors and parents both like them because they allow a child to get several vaccines at once without having to get as many injections. Several combination vaccines are already in use (for example, MMR, MMRV, DTaP, Hib/HepB, DTaP/IPV/HepB, DtaP/IPV/Hib, and DtaP/IPV). More are under development.

Vaccination checklist

Rarely, a child should wait before getting certain vaccines or should not get them at all. Tell your doctor or nurse if any of these apply to your child on a day when an immunization visit is scheduled.

  1. Is your child very sick today? (He or she has more than a common cold, earache, etc.)
  2. Does your child have any severe (life-threatening) allergies?
  3. Has your child ever had a severe reaction after a vaccination?
  4. Does your child have a weakened immune system (because of diseases such as cancer or medications such as steroids)?
  5. Has your child received a transfusion or any other blood product recently?
  6. Has your child ever had convulsions or any kind of nervous system problem?
  7. Will your child be exposed to anyone with a compromised immune system (for example, receiving cancer chemotherapy)?

Health News

What are the vaccine-preventable diseases?

Hib vaccine

DTaP vaccine

The D in DTaP stands for diphtheria.

The T in DTaP stands for tetanus.

The P in DTaP stands for pertussis.

Polio vaccine

MMR vaccine

The first M in MMR stands for measles.

The second M in MMR stands for mumps.

The R in MMR stands for rubella.

Hepatitis B vaccine

Varicella vaccine

Pneumococcal vaccine

Hepatitis A vaccine

Meningococcal vaccine

Rotavirus vaccine

Human papillomavirus vaccine

Influenza vaccine

For more information about vaccinations, please visit the MedicineNet Immunizations (Vaccinations) Center and http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines.

The Food and Drug Administration (www.fda.gov) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (www.cdc.gov) kindly provided portions of the above information.

References

Medically reviewed by Heather Schultz, MD; Board Certified Pediatrics

REFERENCE:

United States. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "Immunization Schedules." Feb. 6, 2018. https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/schedules/index.html.

United States. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "Recommended Immunization Schedule for Persons Aged 0 Through 18 Years -- United States, 2014." https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/schedules/downloads/child/0-18yrs-child-combined-schedule.pdf.