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Child population in India in 1996 was 307
million. The infant mortality rate in 1971 was 129 deaths
per 1000 live births. This got reduced to 79 per 1000
live births in 1992. In that year, under 5, mortality
rate was 124 per 1000 live births. 103 countries have a
lower infant mortality rate of under 5 than India. In
India Keralas IMR was the lowest. In India six
killer diseases of measles, whooping cough, tetanus,
polio, diptheria and T.B. account for almost half of the
mortality vaccines. If your child is not so protected he
has 6 to 8% risk of falling a victim to one of these
diseases by vaccines. If you child is not so protected he
has 6 to 8% risk of falling a victim to one of these
disease, and that is a substantial risk! It is,
therefore, essential that all parents know what are these
diseases about and when can these vaccines be
administered to their child. Let us talk briefly about
these diseases. Tuberculosis
It is high
bacterial infection that most commonly affects the lungs.
It can also affect joints, bones, kidneys etc. In
childhood tuberculosis takes other forms. It causes
symptoms such as fever, irritability, poor appetite,
fatigue etc. In later childhood it is less likely to
cause serious trouble. If, however, left untreated, can
cause death. Treatment is with antibiotics. Immunization
is with BCG vaccine which can be administered at birth or
soon thereafter. A sore or a pimple develops at the BCG
site after about a month. This dries up in 2-4 weeks and
needs no treatment.
T.B. is among the ten top killers in India. Overcrowding
and poor environmental hygiene are some of the causes of
T.B. It spreads amongst children when its germs spread
with the coughing of the T.B. patient. Children who are
listless and malnourished without an obvious cause should
be investigated for TB. Good nutrition is important in
resisting TB infection. Improve the nutrition of the
borderline children.
T.B. can be cured. Preventing T.B. is better than
treating its serious consequence. It is important that
the treatment is continued as long as it is advised. In
cases where it is discontinued due to neglect, the person
becomes resistant to those medicines and in many such
cases he cannot be helped. It is very important that the
infected persons cover their mouths and noses while
coughing and do not spit out the sputum except in a
receptacle contents of which are either burnt or buried.
Polio
The disease begins
with a general sick feeling, fever, headache, diarrhea
and vomiting. A few cases on to paralysis. If there is
any paralysis remaining after the acute stage of the
infection is over, it must be brought to expert medical
attention.
An unimmdnized child will almost certainly be infected
with the polio virus. And for every 200 children who are
infected, one will be crippled for life. One-third of all
cases of polio occur before the age of one year. At birth
or, as soon as possible thereafter, when the baby is
immunized against T.B. with B.C.G, a first dose of polio
vaccine should also be given at that time. This is taken
by mouth. There are three types of virus that can cause
polio. A person has to take all three types of vaccine to
be completely protected. Each time a trivalent (three
type) vaccine is given by being directly dropped onto the
tongue. Three other dozes of polio vaccine should be
given at the ages of 6,10 and 14 weeks. Polio vaccine
should also be given at 1 ˝ years of age. If there is
delay between the dozes, the risk is only during the
period of delay. The protection will eventually be as
high if all the dozes are given. This vaccine can be
given at the same time as shots against DPT. In some
cases a booster dose is given at age give. Effect of that
lasts for five years.
Diphtheria
Diphtheria is a
serious and highly contagious bacterial infection but it
is a completely preventable diseases. Enlarged tonsils
are generally covered by a gray membrane which look like
dirty white patches. Some times it begins in the larynx
with hoarseness and barking cough. The child may have
mild fever, breathing difficulty, sore throat and cough
DPT (Diphtheria, purtussis i.e. whooping cough and
tetanus) vaccine has, in the West, made it a rare
disease. If attended by breathing difficulties,
hospitalisation would be recommended. Without treatment
this disease can cause pneumonia and even heart failure.
DPT, the vaccines against the above mentioned three
diseases are combined and given in a series of three
shots, 4 weeks apart, starting at age 6 weeks. The
protection from these three shots gradually tapers off
and a booster shot given at age 1 ˝ years and another
shot of diphtheria and tetanus given at age 5 years and
at intervals of 10 years thereafter. A small lump or
knot may form in certain cases at the place
where the child received the shot. It may remain for
several months but nothing to worry about. Some doctors
recommended giving acetaminophen at the time of the shot
to reduce significantly the soreness and fever associated
some times with these vaccines.
Whooping
Cough (Purtussis)
This is a cough
with a distinctive "whoop" sound as the child
tries to breathe. It is a bacterial infection which clogs
the airways with mucus. It may be accompanied with common
cold symptoms and vomiting. The child may cough eight or
ten times on one breath. Whooping cough could last from 4
to even 8 weeks at a time. The main dangers at this young
age are exhaustion and pneumonia. Whooping cough takes
from 5 to 14 days to develop after exposure to infection.
Fatality from this disease is very high. DPT vaccine
generally proves effective in the prevention of this
disease. Details about DPT vaccine given in the para on
diphtheria apply. Due to the success of immunization
programme, it is east to forget how prevalent diseases
like whooping cough and polio once were.
Tetanus
Deep cuts or
punctured wounds may be contaminated by the street dirt
or soil that contains cattle manure. They may some times
carry the germs of tetanus (lock jaw). Tetanus germs grow
in dirty cuts and generally kill most of the people who
become infected, if they are not immunized. Doctors, in
case of such wounds, recommend a booster tetanus shot
immediately. Delay in getting the shot may prove fatal in
some cases. DPT vaccine proves effective, if taken in
earlier stages. Details about the use and effect of this
vaccine are given in the para on diphtheria.
When mothers give birth in unhygienic conditions, both
the mother and the child are at risk from tetanus, if the
umbilical cord is cut with an unclean knife or if any
unclean article is put on the stump of the cord, tetanus
can grow. If the tetanus germs enter the mothers
body, and if she is not immunized against tetanus, then
her life will also be at risk. All women should get
immunized against tetanus before or during pregnancy. As
a matter of fact all women of child-bearing age should
get immunized against tetanus. A first dose of the
vaccine should be given as soon as pregnancy is known.
The second dose can be given 4 weeks after the first. No
dose should be given in the last 2 weeks of the
pregnancy. A third dose should be given 6 to 12 months
after the second dose. These 3 tetanus vaccinations
protect the mothers and their new born babies for 5
years.
All infants should be immunized against tetanus (which is
included in DTP) during the first year of life. He should
be given a booster dose at 11/2 and 5 years of age.
Tetanus is a major killer of the new born. If the mother
is not already immunized, then one baby in every hundred
will die of this disease.
Measles
It is a highly
infectious and potentially serious viral illness. Measles
for the first 3 or 4 days has no rash but the eyes are
red and watery. Brownish red spots appear behind the ears
and then spread to the rest of the body. White spots
appear in the mouth. After 3 days of the rash things
should start improving and patches begin to fade. They
take about a week to go away entirely. If the fever stays
or returns, doctor must be consulted. Bed rest and plenty
of fluids are recommended. Complications could be ear and
chest infections, vomiting, diarrhea and possibly
pneumonia. 3-4 times a day rinsing of the mouth is also
recommended. Keep the room warm. Light poses no danger.
An unimmunized child is likely to get measles. It can
kill. Children who survive this disease are weakened and
may later die from malnutrition or other illness. Measles
is also an important cause of malnutrition and blindness.
A quarter of all deaths from measles occur before the age
of one year. Measles is one of the most dangerous of all
childhood diseases. For the first few month of life, the
child has some natural protection against measles,
inherited from the mother. This interferes with the
measles vaccine. But after nine months, natural
protection comes to an end. The child is now at risk from
measles and can and should be immunized. So it is vital
to take a child for measles vaccination as soon as
possible after the age of nine months. Measles vaccine
has made a great impact and many countries are without
cases of this disease.
The first symptoms of measles begin to appear from 1 to
16 days after exposure to the infection. It is contagious
for others from the very beginning of the cold symptoms.
One attack of measles confers immunity for life.
General
Immunization
protects against several dangerous diseases. A child who
is not immunized is more likely to become undernourished,
disabled, and open to greater mortality risk.
- The vaccines work by
building up the childs defences.
- Breast feeding is a
kind of natural immunization against several
disease. Some of the mothers resistance to
disease is passed on to the child in her breast
milk, and especially in the thick yellow milk
(called colostrum) which is produced during the
first few days after the birth.
- All primary
immunizations should be completed in the first
year of the childs life.
- If, for any reason, a
child has not had all the vaccine doses in the
first year of life, it is vital to have the child
immunized as soon as possible thereafter.
- It is safe to
immunize a child who is suffering from fever,
cough, cold, diarrhea or some other illness or
malnutrition. Any advice against giving the
injection is wrong.
- After an injection,
the child may cry, develop a fever, a rash or a
swelling at the site of injection. No worry. As
with any illness, a child should be given plenty
of food and liquids. Breast feeding is especially
helpful.
- Every woman between
the ages of 15 and 44 should be fully immunized
against tetanus.
- Parents, please note
that a child should be taken for immunization
five times in the first year of the childs
life.
Immunization Schedule
for Children As recommended by Unicef, WHO and Unesco
| No. |
Age |
Vaccine |
Diseases
to be immunized against |
| 1. |
Birth |
BCG, Polio |
Tuberculosis,
Polio |
| 2. |
6 weeks |
DPT, Polio |
Diphtheria,
whooping cough, Tetanus, Polio |
| 3. |
10 weeks |
DPT, Polio |
Diphtheria,
whooping cough, Tetanus, Polio |
| 4. |
14 weeks |
DPT, Polio |
Diphtheria,
whooping cough, Tetanus, Polio |
| 5. |
9 months |
Measles |
Measles |
| 6. |
1 1/2 years |
DPT, Polio |
Diphtheria,
whooping cough, Tetanus, Polio |
| 7. |
5 years |
DT |
Diphtheria,!
Tetanus |
[index]
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