2007 Pediatric & adolescent immunization schedules released
Yesterday, the American Academy of Pediatrics released the 2007 recommended immunization schedules for children, adolescents and catch-up immunization. (As always, the schedules are a joint production of the ACIP, AAP, and American Academy of Family Physicians, but it appears that the AAP website is first to release it publicly.) The new schedule includes, among other changes, the new recommendations for rotavirus and HPV vaccination, as announced in 2006.
The traditional one-page schedule covering all vaccine doses from birth to 18 years had grown increasingly complex and crowded in recent years, a multi-colored sea of bars, shaded boxes, dotted lines, abbreviations, and minuscule print. The chief solution to this problem is the expansion of the single-page schedule to three pages, one for birth-6 years, another for ages 7-18, and a third for catch-up immunization spacing. Many of the more confusing design elements from years past have been eliminated and the fine-print footnotes are now bullet points.
While this update is marked improvement over previous versions with respect to comprehensibility, most parents will still be far better served consulting their physician to understand clearly which vaccines are recommended for their children and when.
Update, 1/5/06 -- The latest issue of CDC's MMWR also announces the newly revised schedules.
The traditional one-page schedule covering all vaccine doses from birth to 18 years had grown increasingly complex and crowded in recent years, a multi-colored sea of bars, shaded boxes, dotted lines, abbreviations, and minuscule print. The chief solution to this problem is the expansion of the single-page schedule to three pages, one for birth-6 years, another for ages 7-18, and a third for catch-up immunization spacing. Many of the more confusing design elements from years past have been eliminated and the fine-print footnotes are now bullet points.
While this update is marked improvement over previous versions with respect to comprehensibility, most parents will still be far better served consulting their physician to understand clearly which vaccines are recommended for their children and when.
Update, 1/5/06 -- The latest issue of CDC's MMWR also announces the newly revised schedules.
Labels: ACIP, CDC, MMWR, Recommendations


