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TUESDAY, Feb. 7, 2017 (HealthDay News) -- Roll up your sleeves, America. A national advisory panel of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has released its 2017 advisory for recommended shots affecting adults.
This year's advisory revises guidance on seasonal flu shots by
eliminating nasal flu vaccines and modifying flu-shot advice for
people with egg allergy. It also tweaks recommendations for
vaccines against human papillomavirus (HPV), hepatitis B and
meningococcal disease.
Doctors use the annually updated vaccine schedule to ensure that patients receive the right vaccines for their age, medical condition and other risk factors. The entire list includes 13 vaccinations.
"All adults need immunizations to help them prevent getting and spreading serious disease that could result in poor health, missed work, medical bills, and not being able to care for family," said the report's lead author, Dr. David Kim. He is deputy associate director for adult immunizations in the CDC's Immunization Services Division.
The CDC sets the adult immunization schedule based on recommendations from the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), a group of medical and public health experts whose advice reflects the latest science.
Here are the major changes you need to know about:
No more nasal flu vaccine.
"It's not used a ton in adult medicine," said Dr. Laura Hurley,
who was not involved in setting the new guidelines. She is an
assistant professor of general internal medicine at the University
of Colorado School of Medicine.
Flu vaccine for people with egg allergy.
Last year, people with more serious egg allergy were advised to stick with an egg-free flu vaccine, she explained.
The new guidance states that even people who develop symptoms like swelling, lightheadedness or breathing difficulties may get either type of flu shot. But they should get the shot under supervision of a health care provider who is able to recognize and manage severe allergic conditions, the committee advises.
HPV vaccine for adolescents.
The vaccine protects against cervical cancer and a number of other tumors linked to the human papillomavirus (HPV).
On Tuesday, the American Cancer Society announced that it was supporting the new ACIP recommendation of a two-dose schedule for boys and girls who begin the vaccine regimen at ages 9 to 14.
"In the past several years, studies have shown the vaccine is even more effective than expected," explained Debbie Saslow, senior director of HPV-Related and Women's Cancers at the American Cancer Society (ACS).
"This new two-dose regimen is easier to follow, and we now know is very effective in preventing HPV, which is linked to a half dozen types of cancer," she added in an ACS news release.
Both the ACS and the CDC advisory committee still recommend three doses of the HPV vaccine for young adults who were not immunized as adolescents. The vaccine may be given to women through age 26 and men through age 21.
New advice for people who are HIV positive.
Hepatitis B for adults with chronic liver
disease.
"This is a lot of people," said Fryhofer. "Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease is the most common liver disorder in western industrialized countries," she added.
"If you're obese, you're more likely to have fat in your liver,
which means that you would be on the list to get hepatitis B
vaccination," she said.
Adult vaccination rates and barriers.
Hurley said the flu vaccine is a particularly tough sell because it requires annual vaccination. Adults "don't prioritize vaccinations for themselves," said Hurley, noting that the flu vaccine is safe and can prevent death and complications from severe virus.
But according to the CDC's Kim, "Flu vaccine is especially
important for people with chronic health conditions, pregnant women
and older adults."
Also of concern, only 20 percent of adults 19 and older have had a Tdap vaccine, which protects against tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis (whooping cough), the report noted.
Fryhofer said insurance affects the likelihood of vaccination. "People who have insurance are two to five times more likely to be vaccinated, because the cost issue's a big barrier," she explained.
The new vaccine schedule appears Feb. 7 in the
journal
SOURCES: David Kim, M.D., deputy associate director, adult
immunizations, Immunization Services Division, U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention; Laura Hurley, M.D., assistant
professor, general internal medicine, University of Colorado School
of Medicine, Denver; Feb. 7, 2017, news release, American Cancer
Society; Sandra Fryhofer, M.D., general internist, Atlanta, and
American College of Physicians' liaison to the Advisory Committee
on Immunization Practices; Feb. 7, 2017,
HealthDay
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