The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has yet to decide whether the government will
recommend the use of a vaccine, but ACIP will help CDC plan how to distribute it, in case it is needed.
Experts advising the WHO are expected to
recommend the use of the vaccine in some malaria - stricken countries
Recommended use of vaccine containing all four leptospiral serovars.
Not exact matches
The
use of hepatitis B
vaccine in infant immunization programmes,
recommended by WHO and now implemented in 80 countries, is a further development that will eventually eliminate risk
of transmission.
The World Health Organization (WHO) in Geneva, Switzerland, put the brakes on implementation
of the world's first dengue
vaccine today when it
recommended it only be
used in people who have previously been infected with the disease — a move that will shrink the potential market for the
vaccine's producer, Sanofi Pasteur.
A new approach to the live flu
vaccine would be particularly advantageous right now after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stopped
recommending use of the live attenuate flu
vaccine, FluMist ® earlier this year.
After the European Medicines Agency's Committee for Medicinal Products for Human
Use meeting 19 - 22 October, the agency recommended that everyone regardless of age receive two doses of the pandemic flu vaccines approved for use the
Use meeting 19 - 22 October, the agency
recommended that everyone regardless
of age receive two doses
of the pandemic flu
vaccines approved for
use the
use there.
The flu shot, on the other hand, performed well and the CDC
recommends using this
vaccine in place
of FluMist ®.
Partly based on these findings, the World Health Organization is
recommending that this
vaccine be
used only in areas where there is a known high burden
of disease.
Most physicians reported
using many different strategies to convince parents to stick with the
recommended vaccine schedule, but few
of those were considered effective.
Influenza remains a major health problem in the United States, resulting each year in an estimated 36,000 deaths and 200,000 hospitalizations.4 Those who have been shown to be at high risk for the complications
of influenza infection are children 6 to 23 months
of age; healthy persons 65 years
of age or older; adults and children with chronic diseases, including asthma, heart and lung disease, and diabetes; residents
of nursing homes and other long - term care facilities; and pregnant women.4 It is for this reason that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has
recommended that these groups, together with health care workers and others with direct patient - care responsibilities, should be given priority for influenza vaccination this season in the face
of the current shortage.1 Other high - priority groups include children and teenagers 6 months to 18 years
of age whose underlying medical condition requires the daily
use of aspirin and household members and out -
of - home caregivers
of infants less than 6 months old.1 Hence, in the case
of vaccine shortages resulting either from the unanticipated loss
of expected supplies or from the emergence
of greater - than - expected global influenza activity — such as pandemic influenza, which would prompt a greater demand for vaccination5 — the capability
of extending existing
vaccine supplies by
using alternative routes
of vaccination that would require smaller doses could have important public health implications.
Certainly if you continue, as I would
recommend to
use the single
vaccine, you do not incur a greater risk
of those diseases in the children, so that you do not lose the benefits
of vaccination if you space them over time.
The
use of this
vaccine is
recommended in dogs with a known high risk
of exposure.
«Don't simply talk about
vaccines; market an equine health plan that includes a biosecurity assessment, and
use a checklist to record your assessment — then provide a written report
of your findings,»
recommended Traub - Dargatz.
I
recommend using live parvo
vaccine only unless there is any question about the immunologic competence
of the dog to be vaccinated and the dog is an adult.
We
recommend using live parvo
vaccine only unless there is any question about the immunologic competence
of the dog to be vaccinated and the dog is an adult.
We
use the highest quality
vaccines available and follow University
of California, Davis, School
of Veterinary Medicine
recommended vaccination schedule.
I
recommend only
using the injectable (shot version)
of the
vaccine and not the nasal
vaccine.
In addition to a new vaccination schedule for your cat which reduces the quantity and frequency
of vaccines over the life
of your cat, many feline health experts are also
recommending using a combination
of a healthy diet and dietary supplements to boost the immune system
of your cat.
But vets who've switched to vaccinating every three years — which is still a misunderstanding
of current guidelines
recommending vaccinating «no more often» than every three years — aren't
using the short - duration
vaccines often enough.
After establishing sound immunity during the first month
of a pet's life, we at South Boulder Animal Hospital assess your pet's risk factors and will
recommend an appropriate health care plan with the judicious
use of vaccines as necessary.
However, the 2003 AAHA
Vaccine Guidelines Task Force does not
recommend the
use of currently available CCoV
vaccines.
Instead
of using multivalent
vaccines (combination
vaccines against more than one disease), they
recommend using monovalent
vaccines which only have one component, e.g., a
vaccine that only contains parvovirus.
He doesn't
recommend giving lepto or Lyme
vaccines (and doesn't
use these shots for his own dogs, even living in lepto and Lyme endemic areas), because
of the high risk and low efficacy
of these
vaccines.
We do not
recommend vaccination with CAV - 1
vaccines, since vaccination with CAV - 2 results in immunity to CAV - 1, and the
use of CAV - 2
vaccines results in less frequent adverse events.
The National Association
of State Public Health Veterinarians
recommends that only three - year
vaccines be
used in rabies control.
Personally, I do not
recommend the
use of coronavirus
vaccine.
We
recommend that all animals coming to our clinic or
using our transport service be current on all
of their vaccinations (rabies, distemper / parvo and bordetella
vaccines for dogs; rabies, FVRCP and feline leukemia
vaccines for cats).
Recommended use of modified - live (MLV)
vaccine.
Recommended use of non-adjuvanted
vaccine.
Recommended use of intranasal
vaccine for initial vaccination and injectable
vaccine for boosters (with proof
of prior intranasal vaccination).
Dr. Ron Schultz, our leading veterinary
vaccine researcher does not
recommend the
use of Lyme disease
vaccines on his own dogs despite living in a Lyme endemic part
of the country in Wisconsin.
CTV.CA (Canada) reported that»» While the
vaccine does work and we still
recommend that it be
used, it does not demonstrate the kinds
of efficacy levels we have reported,» according to the report's lead author Michael T. Osterholm.