Immunizations Flashcards

1
Q

how many vaccine-preventable diseases do we currently target?

A

17

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2
Q

what vaccines are included in the new 2018 schedule?

A

Hep B

DTaP

Hib

PCV13

MMR

IPV

Varicella

Hep A

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3
Q

what is the causative organism of diptheria?

A

cornybacterium diptheriae

toxin-mediated disease

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4
Q

what is the hallmark sign of diptheria?

A

pseumembranous pharyngitis

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5
Q

when do you switch from DTaP to Tdap?

A

Age greater than 7 years

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6
Q

how is tetanus transmitted?

A

through open wounds on the skin in dirt

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7
Q

What does DTaP contain and what is the frequency?

A

Diptheria, tetanus, selected Bordatella pertussis components

5 dose series

Efficacy 80-95% (minimum 3 doses for protection)

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8
Q

how much does immunity wane per year with Tdap?

A

10-15% per year

approx. 90% efficacy at peak

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9
Q

when should pregnant women receive Tdap?

A

every pregnancy, optimally at 27-36 weeks gestation

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10
Q

what is the polio vaccine?

A

killed virus with >99% seroconversion

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11
Q

what kind of vaccine is less immunogenic?

A

polysaccharide vaccine

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12
Q

What is Prevnar13?

A

pneumococcal conjugate vaccine

greater than >90% of pneumococcal invasive serotypes

overall efficacy approx. 75%

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13
Q

what are the meningococcal conjugate vaccines?

A

MenACWY-D (Menactra)

or

MenACWY-CRM (Menveo)

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14
Q

Why do we immunize against HepB?

A

Becasue the majority of cases are contracted from unknown causes

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15
Q

HepB vaccine has what efficacy and lasts how long?

A

>90%

>30 years of efficacy

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16
Q

How do you immunize preterm infants <2kg birthweight for HepB?

A

Give a reduced dose at birth

1st dose at discharge or 1 month of age, whichever is first

don’t count dose at birth as a “dose” for series

17
Q

When do you give Hepatitis A vaccine?

A
  • chronic liver dz
  • travelers to endemic areas
  • close contact with international adoptees
  • Hep A outbreak
  • Routine childhood - 2 doses 6 months apart, starting at 1 year of age
18
Q

What is the measles vaccine?

A

live virus

7-12 days after immunization, 5-10% get mild fever, rash

efficacy 97%

19
Q

if you receive MMR, what is the dosing?

A

at 1 year of age

booster at 5 years of age (measles coverage)

20
Q

what is the mumps vaccine?

A

live virus

Effectiveness is 88%

21
Q

What is the rubella vaccine?

A

live virus

97% effective

we do it because congenital rubella is devastating

22
Q

what is the varicella vaccine?

A

live attenuated

98% effective for any disease

100% prevention of severe disease

about 90% effective post-exposure if given within 3 days

23
Q

why are immunizations dropping in the face of immunization laws in 50 states?

A

exemption provisions you can drive a truck through

religious

personal belief

24
Q

what major study helped to refute that scumbag Wakefield?

A

A Population Based Study of MMR Vaccination and Autism, 2002

Denmark 500k+ cohort study

82% had vaccine

no statistically significant correlation at 95 CI

25
Q

what is the likelihood that you can change the mind of parents who are refusing vaccines?

A

You can’t - studies show little success

better to target under vaccinated population

Title 14 Medicaid program -

26
Q

what are some ways we can try to improve immunization rates?

A
  • make exemption process more difficult
  • improved enforcement of existing vaccination requirements for school entry
  • incentives for vaccinating children on time (reduced insurance rates, tax rebates, or direct payments)
27
Q
A