IAC Express 2007 |
Issue number 676: July 30, 2007 |
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Contents
of this Issue
Select a title to jump to the article. |
- VIS news:
CDC releases interim VIS for hepatitis B vaccine
-
Important: CDC releases updated information on the 7/16/07 edition of the
VIS for intranasal influenza vaccine
- IAC
updates print piece that answers patients' questions about pertussis
- CDC
website posts updated information on HPV brochure and poster and HPV Q&As
for public and professionals
- CDC
website posts presentation slides from the June ACIP meeting
- VIS
translations: VIS for injectable influenza vaccine in Turkish; VISs for
polio and MMR vaccines in Amharic
- WHO
publishes the June 2007 meeting report of the Global Advisory Committee on
Vaccine Safety
- July
issue of the Pandemic Influenza Update now on the IAC website
- Museum in
Virginia opens a permanent exhibit commemorating the most severe polio
outbreak of 1950
- Vacancy
announcement: NVPO seeks senior public health advisor; application
deadline extended to August 17
- MMWR
notifies readers that September 15 is the deadline for applying for the
Epidemic Intelligence Service
-
Minnesota Department of Health schedules its 2007 immunization conference
for October 11-12
- Hib
Initiative offers a free quarterly email newsletter
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Abbreviations |
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AAFP, American Academy of Family Physicians; AAP,
American Academy of Pediatrics; ACIP, Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practices; AMA, American Medical Association; CDC, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention; FDA, Food and Drug Administration; IAC, Immunization
Action Coalition; MMWR, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report; NCIRD,
National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases; NIVS, National
Influenza Vaccine Summit; VIS, Vaccine Information Statement; VPD,
vaccine-preventable disease; WHO, World Health Organization. |
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Issue 676: July 30, 2007 |
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1. |
VIS news: CDC releases interim VIS for hepatitis B vaccine
On July 18, CDC released an interim edition of
the VIS for the hepatitis B vaccine; it replaces the 7/11/01 edition. The
primary reason for issuing the interim edition is to stress that the birth
dose of the vaccine is now recommended for ALL newborns before hospital
discharge. Other changes were made throughout the interim VIS.
Existing stocks of the previous (7/11/01) edition may be used, but use of the
interim edition is encouraged. A final edition is expected in 2008.
To access the interim VIS for hepatitis B vaccine from the CDC website, go
to:
http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/pubs/vis/downloads/vis-hep-b.pdf
To access it from the IAC website, go to:
http://www.immunize.org/vis/hepb01.pdf
For information about the use of VISs, and for VISs in more than 30
languages, visit IAC's VIS web section at
http://www.immunize.org/vis
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2. |
Important: CDC releases updated information on the 7/16/07 edition of the VIS
for intranasal influenza vaccine
On July 27, CDC posted an announcement on the
portion of its website titled "News about Vaccine Information Statements." It
concerns the 7/16/07 edition of the VIS for live, attenuated influenza
vaccine (LAIV, intranasal). The announcement cautions providers against
printing large quantities of the VIS as FDA may approve vaccine licensing
changes in the near future. The announcement is reprinted below in its
entirety.
Important Notice about the 2007-2008 LAIV VIS. It is very
possible that FDA will approve updated licensing for FluMist
during this flu season--possibly before any vaccine has shipped.
If this happens, a new, interim VIS for LAIV will be published.
The available 2007-08 VIS reflects the current licensing. It
might be prudent for providers to delay printing large
quantities of the LAIV VIS until it is known whether this
version will be used. (7/27/07)
To access the announcement, go to:
http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/pubs/vis/vis-news.htm#flu
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3. |
IAC updates print piece that answers patients' questions about pertussis
IAC recently revised its ready-to-print Q&A
patient-education
piece "Pertussis: Questions and Answers." Specifically, the
answer to the question titled "Can you get pertussis more than
once?" was updated.
To obtain a ready-to-print (PDF) version of the revised piece,
go to: http://www.immunize.org/catg.d/p4212.pdf
In the past several weeks, IAC Express announced the
availability of ready-to-print Q&As on many vaccine-preventable
diseases and vaccines. These pieces can be printed and handed
out to patients to help educate them about the seriousness of
VPDs and the importance of vaccination. For more information,
please see article #4 in the July 2, 2007, issue of IAC Express,
which is located at http://www.immunize.org/express/issue672.asp#n4
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4. |
CDC website posts updated information on HPV brochure and poster and HPV Q&As
for public and professionals
CDC recently posted updated information about
some of its
educational materials on human papillomavirus (HPV). Details
follow:
The English-language versions of the patient-education brochure
and poster titled "HPV: Common Infection, Common Reality" are
once again available for online ordering. The brochure product
code is 99-8362; the poster product code is 99-8363.
To order, go to:
https://www2a.cdc.gov/nchstp_od/piweb/stdorderform.asp Scroll
down until you find the pertinent product code(s).
The brochure and poster are also available for downloading at
http://www.cdc.gov/std/hpv/common-downloads.htm
Following concerns that have recently emerged in the media about
the HPV vaccine, CDC developed educational materials for the
general public and professionals.
"HPV Vaccine--Questions and Answers for the Public" is available
at
http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/vpd-vac/hpv/hpv-vacsafe-effic.htm
The professional-education piece "CDC Questions and Answers
Concerning the Safety and Efficacy of Gardasil" is available at
http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/vpd-vac/hpv/downloads/vac-faqs-vacsafe-efficacy.pdf
CDC offers two sources of extensive and comprehensive HPV
information:
(1) For information from the HPV topic page of the Sexually
Transmitted Diseases web section, go to: http://www.cdc.gov/std/hpv
(2) For information from the HPV topic page of CDC's Vaccines &
Immunizations web section, go to:
http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/vpd-vac/hpv
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5. |
CDC website posts presentation slides from the June ACIP meeting
The CDC website recently posted the PowerPoint
slides presented
at the June 27-28 ACIP meeting. Slides are available on the
following topics:
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Hepatitis A vaccine
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Vaccine financing
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Adult Immunization Schedule
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Childhood/Adolescent Immunization Schedule
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Immunization Safety Office
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Herpes zoster vaccine
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Combination vaccines
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Meningococcal conjugate vaccine (MCV4)
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Economic analyses of vaccine
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Vaccines supply
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Pneumococcal vaccines
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Vaccines during Pregnancy
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Influenza
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Vaccines in persons with HIV/AIDS
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Rotavirus vaccines
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Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines
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Varicella
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Agency update
To access the slides, go to:
http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/recs/acip/slides-jun07.htm
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6. |
VIS translations: VIS for injectable influenza vaccine in Turkish; VISs for
polio and MMR vaccines in Amharic
Dated 7/16/07, the current version of the VIS for
trivalent
inactivated influenza vaccine (TIV; injectable) is now available
on the IAC website in Turkish. Also, the current versions of the
VISs for inactivated polio vaccine (IPV, dated 1/1/00) and
measles-mumps-rubella vaccine (MMR; dated 1/15/03) are available
on the IAC website in Amharic (spoken in Ethiopia). IAC
gratefully acknowledges Mustafa Kozanoglu, MD, and Murat
Serbest, MD, Adana, Turkey, for the Turkish translation; and
Healthy Roads Media, Bozeman, MT, for the Amharic translations.
To obtain a ready-to-print (PDF) version of the VIS for TIV in
Turkish, go to: http://www.immunize.org/vis/tu_flu06.pdf
To obtain it in English, go to:
http://www.immunize.org/vis/2flu.pdf
To obtain a ready-to-print (PDF) version of the VIS for IPV in
Amharic, go to: http://www.immunize.org/vis/am_pol.pdf
To obtain it in English, go to:
http://www.immunize.org/vis/ipv-00.pdf
To obtain a ready-to-print (PDF) version of the VIS for MMR
vaccine in Amharic, go to:
http://www.immunize.org/vis/am_mmr.pdf
To obtain it in English, go to:
http://www.immunize.org/vis/mmr03.pdf
For information about the use of VISs, and for VISs in more than
30 languages, visit IAC's VIS web section at
http://www.immunize.org/vis
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7. |
WHO publishes the June 2007 meeting report of the Global Advisory Committee
on Vaccine Safety
On July 20, the WHO publication Weekly
Epidemiological Record
(WER) published "Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety
[GACVS], 12-13 June 2007." An expert clinical and scientific
advisory body, GACVS deals independently and with scientific
rigor with vaccine safety issues of potential global importance.
It held its sixteenth meeting June 12-13.
The WER article summarizes some of the issues meeting attendees
considered, including the following vaccine safety and policy
issues: (1) monitoring vaccine safety; (2) safety of vaccine
formulations; (3) mumps vaccine virus strain repository; (4)
safety of BCG [bacille Calmette-Guerin] vaccines; (5) safety of
human papillomavirus vaccine; (6) update on Menactra and
Guillain-Barre syndrome; (7) safety of rotavirus vaccines; and
(8) influenza vaccines: update.
To access a ready-to-print (PDF) version of the July 20 issue,
go to: http://www.who.int/wer/2007/wer8228_29.pdf
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8. |
July
issue of the Pandemic Influenza Update now on the IAC website
CDC recently issued the July issue of the email
newsletter
Pandemic Influenza Update. To access it, go to:
http://www.immunize.org/pandemic/panflu707.pdf
To access a range of pandemic influenza resources on the IAC
website, go to http://www.immunize.org/pandemic
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9. |
Museum in Virginia opens a permanent exhibit commemorating the most severe polio
outbreak of 1950
[The following is cross posted from the July 2007
issue of
Parents PACK, an electronic newsletter published by the Vaccine
Education Center of Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. To
access the Parents PACK archives, go to:
http://www.chop.edu/consumer/jsp/division/generic.jsp?id=85561]
Spotlight: Polio Leaves Its Mark
The summer of 1950 made a lasting impression in the Blue Ridge
Mountain town of Wytheville, VA. During the summer referred to
as the "summer without children," the polio outbreak was more
severe than anywhere else in the country.
At the end of June 2007, the Department of Museums in Wytheville
celebrated the opening of a new permanent exhibit about the
polio outbreak during the "summer without children."
In this 1950s town with a typical main street and summers full
of tourists from the south looking to enjoy the cool mountain
air, polio affected everyone. The exhibit nicely sets up 1950s
life in Wytheville and traces the cases of polio through memoirs
and recollections of family members, physicians, businessmen,
and funeral directors, who doubled as ambulance drivers
throughout the epidemic. In addition to film footage, newspaper
reports, and personal accounts, the exhibit also displays both
infant-size and adult iron lungs.
To learn more, visit the Wytheville Department of Museums
website at http://museums.wytheville.org/default.htm The polio
exhibit is housed in the Thomas J. Boyd Museum. The museum
coordinator of heritage education has also written about the
polio outbreak in "A Summer Without Children," available on the
website in the publications section.
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10. |
Vacancy announcement: NVPO seeks senior public health advisor; application
deadline extended to August 17
The National Vaccine Program Office (NVPO) of the
Department of
Health and Human Services seeks a senior public health advisor
for its office in Washington, DC. The closing date for filing an
application is August 17, 2007.
According to the job announcement, "the incumbent serves as
principal advisor and confidant to the Director of the National
Vaccine Program Office in planning and determining public health
policies, programs, and activities related to vaccines and
immunization."
For additional information, go to: http://jobsearch.usajobs.opm.gov In the box titled Keyword
Search, type in this job announcement number: HHS-OS-2007-0299.
Scroll to the bottom of the page, and click on the button titled
Search for Jobs.
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11. |
MMWR notifies readers that September 15 is the deadline for applying for the
Epidemic Intelligence Service
CDC published "Notice to Readers: Epidemic
Intelligence Service
Application Deadline--September 15, 2007" in the July 27 issue
of MMWR. The notice is reprinted below in its entirety.
The Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS) is a 2-year,
postgraduate program of service and on-the-job training for
health professionals interested in the practice of epidemiology.
Each year, EIS provides approximately 80 persons from around the
world opportunities to gain hands-on experience in epidemiology
at CDC or state or local health departments. EIS officers, often
called CDC's "disease detectives," have gone on to have
leadership positions at CDC and other public health agencies.
The EIS experience also is useful for health professionals who
would like to gain a population-based perspective on public
health practice.
Persons with a strong interest in applied epidemiology who meet
at least one of the following qualifications may apply to EIS:
- Physicians with >=1 year of clinical training
- Persons with a doctoral degree in epidemiology, biostatistics,
the social or behavioral sciences, natural sciences, or the
nutrition sciences
- Dentists, physician assistants, and nurses with a master of
public health (MPH) or equivalent degree
- Veterinarians with an MPH or equivalent degree or relevant
public health experience
Applications are being accepted for the July 2008-June 2010 EIS
program. Deadline for submitting application materials is
September 15, 2007. Application information and EIS program
details are available at http://www.cdc.gov/eis, by telephone
[at] (404) 498-6110, or via e-mail [at] eisepo@cdc.gov
To access a web-text (HTML) version of the notice, go to:
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5629a5.htm
To access a ready-to-print (PDF) version of this issue of MMWR,
go to: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/PDF/wk/mm5629.pdf
To receive a FREE electronic subscription to MMWR (which
includes new ACIP statements), go to:
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/mmwrsubscribe.html
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12. |
Minnesota Department of Health schedules its 2007 immunization conference for
October 11-12
The Minnesota Department of Health has scheduled
its 2007
immunization conference for October 11-12 in Bloomington, MN.
Titled "Got Your Shots?" the conference will bring together
public and private partners to explore ongoing and upcoming
issues related to vaccine-preventable diseases and immunization.
Conference presenters include Donna Weaver, RN, MN, from CDC;
Paul Offit, MD, from Children's Hospital of Philadelphia; and
L.J. Tan, PhD, from the American Medical Association.
Registration will open in August.
For comprehensive conference information, go to:
http://www.health.state.mn.us/divs/idepc/immunize/gysconf07.html
For more information, contact Chris Rosga at
Christine.rosga@health.state.mn.us or (651) 201-5558.
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13. |
Hib Initiative offers a free quarterly email newsletter
The Hib Initiative unites experts from Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg
School of Public Health, the London School of Hygiene and
Tropical Medicine, the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, and the World Health Organization. Its mission is to
expedite and sustain evidence-informed decisions at the global,
regional, and country levels regarding the use of Hib
vaccination to prevent childhood meningitis and pneumonia.
The newsletter Hib Focus provides a focus on haemophilus
influenzae type b and the work of the Hib Initiative.
To access a ready-to-print (PDF) version of the July 2007 issue
of Hib Focus, go to:
http://www.hibaction.org/news/newsletter/hibFocusVol2No3.pdf
To sign up to receive this quarterly newsletter by email, go to:
http://www.hibaction.org/news/newsletter
To visit the Hib Initiative website, go to:
http://www.hibaction.org
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