Vaccination
Vaccination
Vaccination
Dr.Anam Zamin
M.Phil ( Pharmaceutics)
Lecturer
IIUI
Immunit
y
Specific defenses
Immunity
microorganism, and is often made from weakened or killed forms of the microbe.
The agent stimulates the body's immune system to recognize the agent as foreign,
destroy it, and "remember" it, so that the immune system can more easily
recognize and destroy any of these microorganisms that it later encounters.
Vaccination
⚫ Vaccination is the administration of antigenic material (a vaccine)
to stimulate an individual's immune system to develop immunity .
⚫ Artificially acquired adaptive immunity
develops only through deliberate actions such as
vaccination.
⚫ The effectiveness of vaccination has been widely
studied and verified.
⚫ Vaccination is the most effective method of preventing infectious
diseases; widespread immunity due to vaccination is largely
responsible for the worldwide eradication of smallpox and the
restriction of diseases such as polio, measles, and tetanus from much
of the world.
Aims of Immunisation
⚫Programmes
To protect those at highest risk
(selective immunisation strategy)
or
⚫ To eradicate, eliminate or control
disease (mass immunisation strategy)
• Eradication
Infection (pathogen) has been
removed worldwide e.g.
smallpox
⚫ Elimination
Disease has disappeared from one
area but remains elsewhere e.g.
polio, measles
⚫ Control
Vaccines
⚫ A Vaccine is a Preparation of living or inactivated microorganism or
viruses or their components used to induce active specific
immunity.
Derivation
⚫ The term vaccine derived from Edward Jenner's 1876.
⚫ The word vaccine comes from the cowpox virus vaccinia which
derives from the Latin word vacca for cow. The inoculation
with cowpox vaccine was done to prevent humans from
contracting smallpox. Smallpox was a devasting disease
⚫ In 1885 the French Microbiologist Louis Pasteur and Emile
Roux developed the vaccination against Rabbies.
The Ideal Vaccine
⚫ Immunogenic
⚫ Safe
⚫ Combined
⚫ Single dose
polyvalent vaccines.
Current vaccine
practices
• Routine Immunization
Children 0-23 months – immunization with 8 EPI antigens
Pregnant ladies byTetanus Toxoid (TT) vaccine is given during your
pregnancy to prevent tetanus to you as well as the baby.
Extended Program on Immunization
(EPI)
⚫ The Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) is a disease prevention
activity aiming at reducing illness, disability and mortality from
childhood diseases preventable by immunization.
⚫ These diseases are referred as 8 EPI target diseases and cause millions
of ailments, disabilities & deaths each year.
⚫ Poliomyelitis
⚫ Neonatal Tetanus
⚫ Measles
⚫ Diphtheria
⚫ Pertussis (Whooping Cough)
⚫ Hepatitis-B
⚫ Hib Pneumonia & Meningitis
⚫ Childhood Tuberculosis
⚫ The diseases are preventable and can be eradicated like Smallpox, as very
safe & effective vaccines are available.
⚫ 27 % of deaths in < 5 years age group are due to vaccine
Preventable Diseases.
⚫ 80% children of world are being protected against childhood TB.
⚫ 3 million children are being protected against eight vaccine
preventable diseases and tetanus.
⚫ 1000 deaths in less than 5 year children will daily occur in Pakistan, if
EPI is discontinued. Immunization is one of the most successful and cost
effective health interventions. It has eradicated small pox, lowered the
global incidence of polio so far by 99% and achieved dramatic reductions
in illness, disability and death from diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough
and measles. It is a world-wide Programme being carried out in all
countries assisted by WHO, UNICEF and other donor agencies.
⚫ The global target of the Programme is to immunize over 95% of infants
and childeren..
Adults vaccination schedule