Clinical meaning
Immunization schedules are evidence-based timelines for vaccine administration designed to provide optimal immune protection at the earliest safe age. Active immunization stimulates the recipient's immune system to produce memory B and T cells, providing long-lasting protection. Passive immunization (immunoglobulins) provides immediate but temporary protection through pre-formed antibodies. The childhood immunization schedule targets diseases when children are most vulnerable: hepatitis B at birth, DTaP series starting at 2 months, MMR and varicella at 12 months. Catch-up schedules exist for children who fall behind. Adult immunizations include annual influenza, Tdap booster every 10 years, pneumococcal vaccines for those ≥65, and shingles vaccine (Shingrix) at ≥50. Contraindications include severe allergic reaction to a previous dose, moderate-to-severe acute illness (delay, don't cancel), and specific contraindications per vaccine type. Live vaccines are contraindicated in pregnancy and severe immunodeficiency.
Exam relevance
Risk factors: - Vaccine hesitancy and misinformation reducing coverage - Limited access to healthcare and immunization services - Immunocompromised patients unable to receive live vaccines - Missed doses requiring catch-up scheduling - International travel requiring additional vaccinations