Childhood Vaccination Schedule Center - Yakima, WAYakima Pediatrician Doctors for Childhood Vaccination ScheduleType of Physician: Pediatrician What is a Pediatrician? A certification by the Board of Pediatrics; practitioners are concerned with the physical, emotional, and social health of children from birth to young adulthood. Pediatric care encompasses a wide range of health services, from preventive health care to the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic diseases. The pediatrician understands the constantly changing status of his/her patients due to growth and development, and the consequent changing standards of "normal" for age. Specialty: Pediatrics Common Name: Children's Doctor Pediatrician Doctors in Yakima *![]() Yakima Valley Farm Workers Clinic ![]() Yakima Pediatric Associates ![]() Yakima Pediatric Associates ![]() Yakima Pediatric Associates ![]() Central Washington Family Medicine ![]() Central Washington Family Medicine ![]() Lincoln Avenue Medical Center ![]() Lincoln Avenue Medical Center ![]() Yakima Valley Farm Workers Clinic ![]() Yakima Valley Farm Workers Clinic ![]() Yakima Valley Farm Workers Clinic ![]() Ellensburg Pediatrics ![]() Ellensburg Pediatrics ![]() Sunnyside Pediatrics ![]() Yakima Valley Farm Workers Clinic ![]() Yakima Valley Farm Workers Clinic ![]() Yakima Valley Farm Workers Clinic ![]() Wenatchee Valley Clinic East Wenatchee Clinic ![]() Wenatchee Valley Clinic East Wenatchee Clinic ![]() Columbia Pediatrics PS ![]() Parkview Pediatrics ![]() Parkview Pediatrics ![]() Wenatchee Valley Clinic Moses Lake Clinic ![]() Samaritan Internal Medicine ![]() Henry H Chou MD ![]() Frances Dernbach MD ![]() Kadlec Medical Center ![]() Three Rivers Family Medicine ![]() ABC Pediatrics ![]() ABC Pediatrics ![]() Nikom Wannarachu MD ![]() Nikom Wannarachu MD ![]() Kennewick Pediatrics ![]() Lourdes Primary Care Clinic ![]() John C Henriques MD ![]() Sergio A Palanca MD ![]() David S Saunders MD Yakima, WashingtonUpcoming Local Events2012-06-17
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Childhood Vaccination ScheduleRead the Childhood Vaccination Schedule article » Why do we need vaccines?None of us wants to see our children get sick. If we could, we would protect them from any illness, no matter how small—even the sniffles. Now suppose you could make your child safe from some of the most deadly diseases in history...And suppose that at the same time you could also help protect your neighbors' children and other children around the country from the same diseases...And finally, suppose you could actually help to rid the world of some of these diseases that have been crippling and killing children for centuries. You can do all of these things with one of the easiest and yet most powerful health tools ever developed. You can make sure your children get their shots. How do vaccines work?When you receive a vaccine, it helps your body to create antibodies. Antibodies are the body's defenses that fight off any foreign substances (germs). Although your body can create antibodies on its own, most of the vaccine-preventable diseases cause severe illness and even death before enough antibodies are produced. Immunization (vaccination) schedule Vaccines work best when they are given at certain ages. For example, measles vaccine is not usually given until a child is at least 1 year old. If it is given earlier than that, it may not work as well. On the other hand, the DTaP vaccine should be given over a period of time, in a series of properly spaced doses. More information about the specific diseases your child is vaccinated against is listed later in this article. Following is a description of the routine childhood immunization schedule. It is published each year by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). What childhood vaccines are recommended, and at what ages they should be given?Hepatitis B vaccine:
Recommended Reading Related to Childhood Vaccination ScheduleHepatitis A and B Immunizations » Introduction to hepatitisThe term 'hepatitis' means inflammation of the liver. Hepatitis can be caused by viruses, other infectious agents, alcohol, and other chemicals. The two viruses that most commonly infect the liver are the hepatitis A virus and the hepatitis B virus. Although their names are similar, these viruses are not related. They differ in the way they are transmitted from person to person and their ability to cause chronic infection. Hepatitis AHepatitis A is caused by a virus which is spread predominately through the fecal-oral route when small amounts of infected fecal matter are inadvertently ingested. Infected individuals shed large amounts of the virus in their stool, starting about two weeks before symptoms present, and continue shedding the virus in their stool for one to three months.
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