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Immunisation What you should know • The difference between immunisation and vaccination • Benefits of immunisation • National Immunisation Program • Myths and realities about immunisation • Influenza vaccine and its benefit and effectiveness • Your role 2 Immunisation and vaccination Immunisation • process of making a person immune or resistant to infectious disease Vaccination • administration of a vaccine Vaccine • material used for immunisation – inactivated or weakened virus or bacteria • interacts with the body’s immune system Benefits of immunisation • Protects – the individual – the community • Reasons – reduces illness, disability and death – controls, prevents and eradicates disease – cost effective health strategy – accessible health strategy National Immunisation Program Under immunisation • Individual immunisation levels are incomplete • Reasons for under immunisation: – vaccine safety concerns – difficulty accessing healthcare services – socioeconomic situation • Can put high community vaccination levels at risk Missing out on immunisation • Family unit consisting of: – parents under 25 years – a single parent – more than one child – parents who are unemployed, on low income or with very high or very low education levels • Migrant families • Families who move frequently • Young adults • Healthy adults • People in rural and urban areas Effectiveness of vaccines • No vaccine is 100% effective • Risk from disease is much higher than risk from vaccine • Depends on – age of the person receiving the vaccine – person’s ability to form an immune response – similarity between circulating virus strains and the vaccine Myths and realities about vaccines • • • • • • Vaccines aren’t safe Children get too many vaccines Adults don’t need vaccines My child has a cold, so they shouldn’t get immunised Vaccines have too many side effects Immunisation causes autism Influenza vaccine • 3 strains of virus – swine flu (H1N1) is included • 2 weeks for protection to develop • Require yearly vaccine • Available free on NIP schedule for certain groups Myth: • I can get the flu from the vaccine. Benefits of influenza vaccine • Protects individual against influenza • Reduces – the chance of spreading influenza to others – the number of deaths and hospital admissions due to influenza – the risk of complications from influenza in ‘at-risk’ people – illness in healthy people – workplace absenteeism In-pharmacy influenza vaccine service • • • • • • • • • Conducted in-pharmacy Vaccine administered by a trained immuniser Pharmacist unable to provide vaccinations Pre-vaccine screening Require consumer consent Provided in a private screened area Wait 15-minutes after vaccine Provide information PSA immunisation services in pharmacy - guidelines Immunisation – your role • Maintain a commitment to immunisation • Answer consumer concerns – vaccine safety – reactions and side effects – current immunisation issues • Provide consumers with educational material • Identify high-risk individuals • Collaborate with other healthcare providers