![]() This article is courtesy of the Malaysian Paediatric Association’s Positive Parenting programme in collaboration with expert partners. This is to accelerate its preventive impact in children aged between one to five years old.Ĭonsult a paediatrician to learn more about pneumococcal catch-up vaccination for your toddler or preschooler.ĭatuk Dr Zulkifli Ismail is a consultant paediatrician and paediatric cardiologist. The World Health Organization (WHO) states that catch-up vaccination should be applied when introducing PCV in the NIP if possible. Hence, pneumococcal catch-up vaccination for this group of children is recommended. There are children who are born a little earlier who are currently still under five years of age and also need to be protected against pneumococcal infection. The downside is that it is currently only provided for free for children who are born in 2020 or later. The PCV has finally been included in the NIP starting in 2020 and this is such welcome progress. Parents should also note that some daycare centres, kindergartens and preschools may require children to be fully vaccinated according to the NIP in order to be enrolled in their establishments. These can include infants, the elderly and people with chronic diseases or suppressed immune systems. However, it doesn’t mean that toddlers and preschoolers are free from danger.Ĭhildren still have to complete their doses of the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV), diptheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTaP)-inactivated polio virus (IPV)-hepatitis B (HepB)-Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib) vaccine and Japanese encephalitis (JE) vaccine after the age of one year to ensure full protection against the diseases.Īpart from that, it is important for toddlers and preschoolers to receive and complete vaccination as children below five years old are also categorised as high-risk groups vulnerable to infectious diseases due to their still immature immune system.Ī timeline of the NIP according to a child’s stage of life.Įarly childhood is also the age when most children first go to the daycare centre, preschool and kindergarten.Ĭlose proximity with other children, caregivers and teachers at these places exposes them to possible infections.Īt these ages, children are also very curious to explore their surroundings and this tendency may put them in danger of picking up infections.Īnother reason for toddlers and preschoolers to get vaccinated is to provide a layer of indirect protection for other high-risk populations in their household. Young children who have received their vaccine shots during infancy are protected against the diseases covered by the vaccines. They will continue to receive the remaining shots during their childhood and adolescence (see the next Positive Parenting column in a fortnight for more on this). Typically, a child in the early childhood stage is called a toddler when they are one to three years old, and a preschooler at four to six years old.īy the time a child reaches one year of age, they would have received at least nine out of the total 14 vaccine shots (or more for girls, and children in Sarawak/Sabah) as scheduled in the National Immunisation Programme (NIP). This is the time when they will take their first step, say their first sentence, make their first friend, attend their first class in preschool and experience many other firsts in life. However, it doesn’t mean that a child’s immune system is fully developed once they start to walk and talk.Īfter infancy, the next stage of child development is early childhood – a crucial phase of life when children start to explore the world on their own. This strategy of giving as many vaccines as early in life as possible is followed around the world in order to prevent such deaths. In fact, such diseases were a significant factor in the high rates of infant deaths in the past. ![]() ![]() Infectious diseases such as tuberculosis, polio, diphtheria, measles and pneumococcal disease, can be life-threatening to infants. This is because they are most vulnerable to infection during infancy, so they have to receive most of their immunisation shots as early as possible during that stage of life. Children receive most of their vaccine shots at a very young age.
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