IAC Express 2010 |
Issue number 876: July 6, 2010 |
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Contents
of this Issue
Select a title to jump to the article. |
- Reminder: June 2010 issues of Needle Tips and Vaccinate
Adults available online
- IAC's Honor Roll for Patient Safety updated as five more
healthcare organizations join; related editorial added
- IAC updates handout for the public about hepatitis A
vaccination
- IAC's Video of the Week features real-life stories about
vaccine-preventable diseases
- AAP's Vaccine Status Table is updated and online; two
additional tables have been added
- CDC reports on hepatitis A vaccination coverage among
U.S. children ages 12-23 months during 2006-09
- "CDC
Features" educates the public about pertussis
- Toolkit from Project Immunize Virginia helps healthcare
professionals address parents' concerns about
vaccinations
- CDC reports on a case of vaccinia virus infection in
Washington state in 2010
- Virtual Immunization Communication Network sponsors July
22 webinar on communication strategies for the upcoming
influenza season
- CDC announces Immunization Update 2010 webcast, which is
scheduled for August 5
- Reminder: Vaccine Education Center to hold symposium in
Philadelphia on September 25
- CDC's Epidemiology & Prevention of Vaccine-Preventable
Diseases course scheduled for Lake Tahoe, November 3-5
- North Dakota State Immunization Conference set for August
24-25 in Mandan
- Reminder: PKIDs' webinar about successful social
marketing coming up on July 15
- Fondation Merieux plans October conference on herd
immunity
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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 876: July 6, 2010 |
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1. |
Reminder: June 2010 issues of Needle Tips and Vaccinate
Adults available online
The June 2010 issues of Needle Tips and Vaccinate
Adults are
available online for viewing, downloading, and printing.
Both issues focus on the importance of vaccinating
healthcare personnel against influenza. The content of
Vaccinate Adults is similar to that of Needle Tips, except
the pediatric information has been removed from Vaccinate
Adults.
To download the entire issue of Needle Tips right now, go
to: http://www.immunize.org/nslt.d/n45/n45.pdf
Complete information about the June 2010 issue of Needle
Tips is available at http://www.immunize.org/nt There you
will find a link for displaying and printing the entire 14-page PDF of the issue, along with a table of contents for
viewing and printing individual sections of Needle Tips.
To download the entire issue of Vaccinate Adults right now,
go to: http://www.immunize.org/va/va28.pdf
Complete information about the June 2010 issue of Vaccinate
Adults is available at http://www.immunize.org/va
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2. |
IAC's Honor Roll for Patient Safety updated as five more
healthcare organizations join; related editorial added
IAC encourages qualifying healthcare
organizations to apply
for its Honor Roll for Patient Safety. Since May 10, when
IAC Express last reported on the Honor Roll for Patient
Safety, four institutions and one medical practice have
enrolled. The honor roll recognizes hospitals, medical
practices, professional organizations, and government
entities that have taken a stand for patient safety by
strengthening mandatory influenza vaccination policies for
healthcare workers.
The institutions that have joined since May 10 are Community
Hospital of Long Beach, CA; Georgetown Hospital System,
Georgetown, SC; Seven Hills Pediatric Center, Groton, MA;
and University Hospital, Cincinnati, OH. The medical
practice is Children's Medical Group of Saginaw Bay, Bay
City, MI. The addition of these five healthcare
organizations brings the total number of enrolled
institutions and medical practices to 59.
The "News and Articles" section of the honor roll now
includes a link to the following editorial: "Is It Ethically
Permissible to Mandate Influenza Vaccination for Health Care
Workers?" (Journal of the American Academy of Physician
Assistants, June 2010). To read the editorial, go to:
http://www.jaapa.com/is-it-ethically-permissible-to-mandate-influenza-vaccination-for-health-care-workers/article/171485
To be included in the honor roll, an organization's mandate
must require influenza vaccination for employees and must
include serious measures to prevent transmission of
influenza from unvaccinated workers to patients. Such
measures might include a mask requirement, reassignment to
non-patient-care duties, or dismissal of the employee.
To find out specific information on the mandates of the
enrolled organizations, go to: http://www.immunize.org/honor-roll This web page also
includes information about applying to be included on the
honor roll.
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3. |
IAC updates handout for the public about hepatitis A
vaccination
IAC recently revised "Hepatitis A is a serious
liver
disease--Vaccination can protect you!" to include
information about hepatitis A vaccination for contacts of
international adoptees. Go to:
http://www.immunize.org/catg.d/p4080.pdf
IAC's Handouts for Patients and Staff web section offers
healthcare professionals and the public approximately 250
FREE English-language handouts (many also available in
translation), which we encourage website users to print out,
copy, and distribute widely. To access all of IAC's free
handouts, go to: http://www.immunize.org/handouts
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4. |
IAC's Video of the Week features real-life stories about
vaccine-preventable diseases
IAC encourages IAC Express readers to visit a
video
collection of real-life stories about vaccine-preventable
diseases assembled by the California Immunization Coalition
(CIC). CIC's story bank includes more than 40 stories told
by survivors, family members, friends, and healthcare
providers. They include accounts about HPV and cervical
cancer, varicella, hepatitis B, Hib, influenza,
meningococcal disease, pertussis, pneumococcal disease,
polio, rotavirus, and shingles. The collection also includes
some story collections and public service announcements.
The link to this collection of videos will be available on
the home page of IAC's website through July 11. To access
it, go to: http://www.immunize.org and click on the image
under the words Video of the Week. After July 11, you can
access the page directly at http://shotbyshot.org/story-gallery
Remember to bookmark IAC's home page to view a new video
every Monday. To view an IAC Video of the Week from the
past, go to the video archive at http://www.immunize.org/votw
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5. |
AAP's Vaccine Status Table is updated and online; two
additional tables have been added
In June, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
posted the
most recent version of its popular and useful Vaccine Status
Table. The table now has three component tables:
(1) Status of Recently Submitted, Licensed, and Recommended
Vaccines, which has existed since 2005, provides current
information on vaccines that have been submitted to FDA for
licensure and recommended for use by AAP and CDC.
(2) Newly introduced, Status of Older Vaccine Licensure and
Recommendations includes information on vaccines that were
licensed and recommended before 2008.
(3) Also newly introduced, Status of Recommendations for
Vaccine Use in Special Circumstances or Changes in
Recommended Vaccine Use includes information on vaccines
such as anthrax that are not routinely recommended, and on
previously licensed vaccines such as hepatitis A whose
recommendations have recently changed.
To access the three tables now included in AAP's Vaccine
Status Table, go to:
http://aapredbook.aappublications.org/news/vaccstatus.dtl
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6. |
CDC reports on hepatitis A vaccination coverage among
U.S. children ages 12-23 months during 2006-09
CDC published "Hepatitis A Vaccination Coverage
Among U.S.
Children Aged 12-23 Months--Immunization Information System
Sentinel Sites, 2006-2009" in the July 2 issue of MMWR. The
first paragraph is reprinted below.
Hepatitis A vaccine was first licensed as a 2-dose vaccine
for children aged >=24 months in 1995. In 1996 and 1999, the
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP)
recommended routine hepatitis A vaccination for children
aged >=24 months in communities with the highest rates of
the disease. In August 2005, the minimum age for which the
vaccine was licensed was lowered to 12 months, and in May
2006, ACIP recommended routine vaccination of all children
aged 12-23 months, regardless of risk category or location.
As a result, hepatitis A incidence in the United States
reached a historic low in 2007, the most recent year for
which data are available. To assess hepatitis A vaccine
coverage among children aged 12-23 months from 2006 through
2009, CDC used data from eight Immunization Information
System (IIS) sentinel sites. Average (unweighted) hepatitis
A vaccination coverage with >=1 dose at the sites increased
from 17% in 2006 to 47% in 2009. Average full vaccination
coverage with >=2 vaccine doses through age 23 months
increased from 1% in 2006 to 15% in 2009. Vaccination
coverage with >=1 dose increased the most during 2006
through the first quarter of 2007, after which the rate of
increase slowed. The 2006 ACIP recommendations for routine
hepatitis A vaccination of all children aged 12-23 months
resulted in improved coverage, but coverage has plateaued.
Immunization programs and vaccine providers should encourage
hepatitis A vaccination of all children beginning at age 12
months.
To access the full article in web-text (HTML) format, go to:
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5925a3.htm
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7. |
"CDC Features" educates the public about pertussis
The "CDC Features" web section now includes
information for
the public on pertussis, a timely topic considering the
current outbreak in California.
To access "Pertussis (Whooping Cough)--What You Need To
Know," go to: http://www.cdc.gov/Features/Pertussis
To access an alphabetical index of all "CDC Features," go
to: http://www.cdc.gov/az
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8. |
Toolkit from Project Immunize Virginia helps healthcare
professionals address parents' concerns about
vaccinations
Project Immunize Virginia recently created a
toolkit for
physicians, nurses, and other health professionals who are
in the position to answer parents' questions about vaccines.
Titled Addressing Parents' Concerns about Vaccinations, the
toolkit provides information about recent vaccine studies
and offers suggested conversation topics and resources.
To download the toolkit, go to: http://www.immunizeva.org/tools
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9. |
CDC reports on a case of vaccinia virus infection in
Washington state in 2010
CDC published "Vaccinia Virus Infection After
Sexual Contact
with a Military Smallpox Vaccinee--Washington, 2010" in the
July 2 issue of MMWR. The first paragraph is reprinted
below.
On March 1, 2010, the Washington State Department of Health
(WADOH) notified Public Health--Seattle & King County
(PHSKC) of a suspected case of contact transmission of
vaccinia virus from sexual contact with a member of the
military who had been vaccinated against smallpox. Vaccinia
virus infection after sexual contact has been reported
previously. Despite the patient's exposure history and
clinical presentation, the diagnosis initially was not
considered by the patient's physician, who ordered
laboratory testing for several common sexually transmitted
infections. The patient was seen by a second physician and
referred to an infectious disease specialist, who obtained a
swab sample of a genital lesion for laboratory testing for
vaccinia virus. Vaccinia virus was confirmed by the
Washington State Public Health Laboratory (WAPHL) and the
CDC Poxvirus Laboratory. The patient resided in a household
with an immunosuppressed renal transplant recipient.
Appropriate contact precautions were recommended to the
patient. No additional cases of contact transmission were
reported. This report describes the patient's clinical
course and the associated epidemiologic investigation.
Healthcare providers caring for U.S. military personnel or
their contacts should consider vaccinia virus infection in
the differential diagnosis of clinically compatible genital
lesions. Contact precautions should be emphasized to all
persons who are vaccinated, as well as their contacts with
unexplained lesions that might represent vaccinia infection
from contact transmission.
To access the full article in web-text (HTML) format, go to:
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5925a2.htm
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10. |
Virtual Immunization Communication Network sponsors July
22 webinar on communication strategies for the upcoming
influenza season
The Virtual Immunization Communication Network
(VIC) is
sponsoring a free webinar on July 22 at 11AM Pacific time
(2PM Eastern time). "The Flu Ends with U: Communication
Strategies and Recommendations for the Upcoming Flu Season"
will feature Kristine Sheedy, PhD, associate director for
Communication Science at CDC. Dr. Sheedy will discuss the
messages and communication strategies CDC plans to employ
during the upcoming influenza season.
For more information, go to: http://www.vicnetwork.org
Click on the red button on the right to register.
VIC is a program of the National Public Health Information
Coalition in collaboration with the California Immunization
Coalition.
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11. |
CDC announces Immunization Update 2010 webcast, which is
scheduled for August 5
CDC published "Announcement: Immunization Update
2010
Webcast" in the July 2 issue of MMWR. The announcement is
reprinted below in its entirety.
CDC will present "Immunization Update 2010" via satellite
broadcast and webcast on August 5, 2010. The presentation is
expected to focus on current use of influenza, pneumococcal
conjugate, human papillomavirus, and meningococcal vaccines.
Other emerging issues will be discussed, including the
latest information from the June 2010 meeting of the
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. The 2.5-hour
broadcast will occur live from 9:00 to 11:30 a.m. and will
be rebroadcast the same day from noon to 2:30 p.m. (Eastern
Time). Both broadcasts will feature a live question-and-answer session in which participants nationwide can interact
with the course instructors by toll-free telephone lines.
Additional information about the program and instructions
for accessing the broadcast are available at
http://www2.cdc.gov/phtn/webcast/immupdate2010 Registration
for Internet access is not required. Continuing education
accreditation for this activity is pending. CDC is
accredited as a provider of continuing nursing education by
the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on
Accreditation. The program will become available as a self-study DVD and Internet-based program in September 2010.
Information about the self-study program is available at
http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/ed/imzupdate
To access the announcement in web-text (HTML) format, go to:
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5925a4.htm
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12. |
Reminder: Vaccine Education Center to hold symposium in
Philadelphia on September 25
The Vaccine Education Center at The Children's
Hospital of
Philadelphia will hold a Vaccine Education Symposium on
September 25.
For more information, download the symposium brochure at
http://www.chop.edu/system/galleries/download/pdfs/articles/cme/vaccine-2010.pdf
To register online, go to:
https://www.chop.edu/professionals/educational-resources/continuing-medical-education/registration.cfm/vaccine-2010
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13. |
CDC's Epidemiology & Prevention of Vaccine-Preventable
Diseases course scheduled for Lake Tahoe, November 3-5
CDC's popular Epidemiology & Prevention of
Vaccine-Preventable Diseases course will be offered in Lake Tahoe,
NV, November 3-5.
For comprehensive information, access the conference
brochure at
http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/ed/downloads/nv-brochure2010.pdf
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14. |
North Dakota State Immunization Conference set for August
24-25 in Mandan
The North Dakota State Immunization Conference
will take
place on August 24-25 in Mandan, ND.
For comprehensive information, go to:
http://conferences.und.edu/immunization
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15. |
Reminder: PKIDs' webinar about successful social
marketing coming up on July 15
PKIDs (Parents of Kids with
Infectious Diseases) has
scheduled a 1.5-hour webinar for July 15. The presenters--Chris Saylor and Sherri Michelstein from Alembic Health
Communications--will discuss the social marketing programs
that have helped the National Meningitis Association advance
its mission of raising public awareness about meningococcal
disease and encouraging vaccination.
The "National Meningitis Association Shares Secrets of
Social Marketing Success" webinar is scheduled for July 15
at 9AM Pacific Time (noon Eastern Time). Space is limited
and pre-registration is recommended. To register, go to:
https://cc.readytalk.com/cc/schedule/display.do?udc=p1k2n46d7jtv
The webinar is part of Communications Made Easy, a PKIDS'
program intended to help immunization educators learn the
ropes of social marketing and traditional and social media.
For more information on the Communications Made Easy
program, go to: http://www.pkids.org/cmeontent
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16. |
Fondation Merieux plans October conference on herd
immunity
Fondation Merieux is organizing a conference
titled "Herd
Immunity/Protection: An Important Indirect Benefit of
Vaccination." The conference will take place at Les
Pensieres in Annecy, France, October 25-27.
For information, including the conference brochure and
registration form, go to:
http://www.fondation-merieux.org/-upcoming-conferences-and-events.html
Scroll down to the Herd Immunity event.
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