immunisation timeline milestones in immunisation 429 bc thucydides notices smallpox survivors did...
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TimelineMilestones in Immunisation
• 429 BC Thucydides notices smallpox survivors did not get re-infected• 900 AD Chinese practise variolation• 1700s Variolation reaches Turkey and rest of Europe • 1796 Edward Jenner: from variolation to vaccination • 1803 Royal Jennerian Institute founded• 1870s Violent opposition to vaccination• 1880s Louis Pasteur - sheep trials and rabies• 1890 Emil von Behring discovers basis of diphtheria and tetanus vaccines• 1920s Diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough) and BCG (against
tuberculosis) vaccines widely available• 1955 Polio immunisation programme begins• 1956 WHO launch global drive to eradicate smallpox• 1980 Smallpox eradicated
Why Immunise?
• Immunisation is a way of protecting against serious disease.
• Once immunised bodies can fight those diseases if they come into contact with them.
• If not immunised you will be at risk from catching the disease.
• The only time to stop immunising is when a disease has been eradicated worldwide.
What is a vaccine?
• Vaccines stimulate our immune system to produce antibodies without us having to become infected with the actual disease.
• A dose of vaccine may contain: – a suspending fluid to carry the vaccine into
the body – preservatives and stabilisers so the vaccine
can be stored safely, and – an adjuvant to improve the body's immune
response.
How are vaccines made?
• Vaccine manufacture starts by generating the very organism that produces the disease, the pathogen
• Many bacteria, for example, can be grown on agar gel. Viruses are mass produced by infecting cells grown in tissue culture.
• Then the pathogen must be altered to make sure it doesn't trigger the disease itself.
Types of immunity
• Active – via vaccine
• Passive – inherited from Mother
Herd immunity?
• For more detail go to: http://www.immunisation.nhs.uk
Childhood ImmunisationWHEN TO IMMUNISE WHAT IS GIVEN HOW IT IS GIVEN
2, 3 and 4 months old Diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough), polio and Hib (DTaP/IPV/Hib)
One injection
MenC One injection
Around 13 months old Measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) One injection
3 years and 4 months to 5 years old
Diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough) and polio (dTaP/IPV or DTaP/IPV)
One injection
Measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) One injection
10 to 14 years old (and sometimes shortly after birth)
BCG (against tuberculosis) Skin test, then, if needed, one injection
13 to 18 years old Diphtheria, tetanus, polio (Td/IPV) One injection
Travel vaccines
• You may need extra immunisations when going abroad.
• For more information on vaccines and health advice for travel abroad:
Influenza
Three types
• A
• B
• C – usually mild
Respiratory disease – spread through droplet infection.
Incubation period = 1 – 3 days
Pneumococcal• The pneumococcal vaccine (or pneumo
vaccine for short) protects against pneumococcal infection.
• People who are 65 and over are now routinely offered the vaccine.
The global context
‘The two public health interventions that have had the greatest impact on the world’s health are clean water and vaccines’
(World Health Organisation)
Global Immunisation Facts: • 3 million children die every year from
diseases that are entirely preventable. • 30 million infants have no access to basic
immunisation each year. • In almost 50 nations, 60 percent of the
children are not immunised. • A child in the developing world is ten times
more likely to die a vaccine-preventable death than a child in an industrialised nation.
• One child can be fully immunised for $17 (about £30)
• Every $1 spent on immunisation saves society up to $29.