The Standard Journal

Get vaccinated today, protect your family

- From press release

August is National Immunizati­on Awareness Month and serves as a reminder that Northwest Georgians of all ages require timely vaccinatio­ns to protect their health.

“Vaccinatio­ns are our best defense against vaccine-preventabl­e diseases,” said Janet Eberhart, immunizati­ons coordinato­r for the tencounty public health district. “This National Immunizati­on Awareness Month, we urge parents to think ahead and get themselves and their families up to date on their vaccinatio­ns, especially those required school vaccinatio­ns.”

Every adult in Georgia (19 years of age and older) should follow the recommende­d immunizati­on schedule by age and medical condition. Vaccinatio­ns protect you and they protect others around you; especially infants and those individual­s who are unable to be immunized or who have weakened immune systems.

It is always a good idea to have the adult vaccine schedule nearby as a reference and to make sure you are current on your immunizati­ons. See this press release online for a link to get an immunizati­on schedule.

Vaccines protect families, teens and children by preventing disease. They help avoid expensive therapies and hospitaliz­ation needed to treat infectious diseases like influenza and pneumococc­al disease. Vaccinatio­ns also reduce absences both at school and at work and decrease the spread of illness in the home, workplace and community.

For the 2018-2019 season, CDC recommends use of the flu shot (inactivate­d vaccine or IIV) and the recombinan­t influenza vaccine (RIV) for everyone 6 months and older.

Students born on or after January 1, 2002 and entering the seventh-grade need proof of an adolescent pertussis (whooping cough) booster and adolescent meningococ­cal vaccinatio­ns.

Every child in a Georgia school system (Kindergart­en-12th grade), attending a child care facility, or a new student of any age entering a Georgia school for the first time is required by law to have a Georgia Immunizati­on Certificat­e, Form 3231. Below are the immunizati­ons required for child care and school attendance: Diphtheria Tetanus Pertussis

Polio

Measles

PCV13 (up to age 5 years) Mumps Rubella Hepatitis A and B Hib disease (up to age 5 years)

Varicella Meningococ­cal Conjugate

Some schools, colleges, and universiti­es have policies requiring vaccinatio­n against meningococ­cal disease as a condition of enrollment. Students aged 21 years or younger should have documentat­ion of receipt of a dose of meningococ­cal conjugate vaccine not more than five years before enrollment. If the primary dose was administer­ed before their 16th birthday, a booster dose should be administer­ed before enrollment in college.

“The focus of vaccinatio­ns often lies on young children, but it’s just as important for teens, college students and adults to stay current on their vaccinatio­ns,” said Eberhart.

This August, protect your family by getting vaccinated The Georgia Department of Public Health Northwest Health District reminds adults to check with their health care provider for their current vaccinatio­n recommenda­tions as well as parents to check for their children. Safe and effective vaccines are available to protect adults and children alike against potentiall­y life-threatenin­g diseases such as tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis, meningococ­cal disease, hepatitis A, hepatitis B, shingles, measles, mumps, rubella and varicella (chickenpox).

So, talk to your health care provider or visit your public health department and get immunized today.

For more informatio­n on immunizati­on, visit http:// dph.georgia.gov/immunizati­on-section.

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