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Saving Lives: Immunization in the United States
This activity examines the different types of vaccines recommended for children, as well as the rates at which U.S. children are immunized.
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Vaccine Recommendations
Most immunizations of children are recommended worldwide and have already saved a billion or more lives. Some, however, are controversial, and some nations differ from the U.S. recommendations shown here.
Click on the vaccine names to view each disease's characteristics.
Immunization in the United States
Virtually all public health doctors and pediatricians agree that babies need to be up-to-date on immunization, partly because every doctor has tended a sick baby who suffers from a disease that could have been prevented. Infants sometimes die of these diseases—as occurred last year in California with a pertussis (also known as whooping cough) outbreak. Yet, the overall U.S. rate of full immunization is only about 70 percent, which means that almost one baby in every three is unprotected. The U.S. rate is lower than in several European nations, and the range—from 57 percent in Arkansas to 78 percent in Massachusetts—suggests that local context influences the behavior of doctors and parents. Click on each state to see how many children ages 19–35 months have received a combined vaccine series.*
Percent of children ages 19–35 months who have received a combined vaccine series*
Saving Lives: Immunization in the United States
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REFERENCES
MMWR. (2014, August 29). National, state, and selected local area vaccination coverage among children aged 19–35 months — United States, 2013. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 63(34), 741-748.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2014, January). 2014 Recommended immunizations for children from birth through 6 years old. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers For Disease Control and Prevention.