UK vaccination programme
Current trends
Herd immunity
What to do when a pt is unvacced
General vaccine knowledge
100

Name a disease that the childhood UK vaccination program vaccinates against 

Diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, polio, haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib), hepatitis B, Meningococcal groups, Rotavirus, Measles, Mumps, Rubella, Human papillomavirus 

100

Are global vaccination rates rising, stalling or falling?

Vaccine coverage has stalled or reversed amid persistent health inequalities and soaring levels of misinformation and hesitancy

Measles vaccination rates have fallen in 100 of 204 countries, while coverage for at least one dose against diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, measles, polio or tuberculosis has declined in 21 of 36 high-income countries – including France, Italy, Japan, the UK and the US.  

100

Define Herd Immunity?

Herd immunity is when a high enough proportion of a population is immune to an infectious disease either through vaccination or previous infection that it indirectly protects individuals who are not immune

100

Is an unvaccinated child more likely to develop a serious infectious disease?

Yes

100

What did the world first vaccine immunise against

Smallpox (cowpox was given as the vaccine)

200

What disease does the MMR vaccine immunise against?

Measles, mumps and rubella

200

Is every child in the UK vaccinated?

No, parents have autonomy for their child's health and can refuse the vaccine. 

In the last quarter, coverage in one-year-olds in England (excluding London) was at least 92% for all immunisations except rotavirus

200

Name a disease we have eradicated with vaccines?

Smallpox- only one that has been completely wiped out

200

Who needs to be contacted if the pt presents with a notifiable disease?

Public health England

200

Name a type of vaccine

Inactivated vaccines- involve giving a killed version of the pathogen. They cannot cause an infection and are safe for immunocompromised patients, although they may not have an adequate response

Subunit and conjugate vaccines- only contain parts of the organism used to stimulate an immune response. They also cannot cause infection and are safe for immunocompromised patients

Live attenuated vaccines- contain a weakened version of the pathogen. They are still capable of causing infection, particularly in immunocompromised patients

Toxin vaccines contain a toxin that is normally produced by a pathogen

mRNA 

300

What age should children be given the HPV?

12-13 yo- 2 doses given 6 to 24 months apart 

Ideally given to girls and boys before they become sexually active 

300

In the UK, outbreaks of which disease have been in the press a lot lately?

Measles 

300

Name the 2 types of Immunity 

Active and Passive

300

Is a child being unvaccinated a safeguarding concern?

No, parent has autonomy for their child's health.

Could be a concern if parent is not engaging with healthcare at all, but parent is allowed to make decisions around vaccines for their child

300

How do mRNA vaccines work?

To trigger an immune response, many vaccines put a weakened or inactivated germ into our bodies. Not mRNA vaccines. Instead, mRNA vaccines use mRNA created in a laboratory to teach our cells how to make a protein—or even just a piece of a protein—that triggers an immune response inside our bodies. This immune response, which produces antibodies, is what helps protect us from getting sick from that germ in the future

400

Which type of Meningococcal is vaccinated against when a child is 1 year or younger?

A, B, C, W or Y

B- given at 8 weeks, 16 weeks and 1 year

Meningococcal groups A, C, W and Y are given at 14 years old

400

Despite offering the HPV vaccine to both boys and girls since 2019, certain London boroughs report uptake rates below 40%. What is the primary public health concern associated with this low vaccination coverage?

A. Development of HPV vaccine-resistant strains
B. Reduced aspiration to vaccinate other childhood immunizations
C. Increased future incidence of HPV-related cancers
D. Overuse of catch-up vaccination resources

C. Increased future incidence of HPV-related cancers

400

Which of the following is most likely to reduce the effectiveness of herd immunity in a population?

A. Improved cold chain storage of vaccines
B. Increased uptake of routine childhood vaccinations
C. Clustering of unvaccinated individuals in specific communities
D. Introduction of new vaccine boosters
E. Use of combination vaccines such as MMR

C- When unvaccinated individuals are clustered (e.g. in specific geographic or cultural groups), it increases the risk of local outbreaks, undermining the benefits of herd immunity even if overall coverage seems high.

400

Name one routine and one urgent notifiable disease

Acute encephalitis    Routine

Acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) or Acute flaccid myelitis (AFM)    Urgent

Acute infectious hepatitis (A/B/C)    Urgent

Acute meningitis    Urgent

Acute poliomyelitis    Urgent

Anthrax    Urgent

Botulism    Urgent

Brucellosis    Routine. Urgent if acquired in UK

Chickenpox (varicella)    Routine

Cholera    Urgent

Congenital syphilis    Routine

COVID-19    Routine

Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD)    Routine

Disseminated gonococcal infection (DGI)    Routine

Diphtheria    Urgent

Enteric fever (typhoid or paratyphoid fever)    Urgent

Food poisoning    Routine. Urgent if part of a cluster or outbreak

Haemolytic uraemic syndrome (HUS)    Urgent

Infectious bloody diarrhoea    Urgent

Influenza of zoonotic origin    Urgent

Invasive group A streptococcal disease    Urgent

Legionnaires’ disease    Urgent

Leprosy    Routine

Malaria    Routine. Urgent if acquired in UK

Measles    Urgent

Meningococcal septicaemia    Urgent

Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS)    Urgent

Mpox (previously known as monkeypox)    Urgent

Mumps    Routine

Neonatal herpes    Routine

Plague    Urgent

Rabies    Urgent

Rubella    Routine

Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)    Urgent

Scarlet fever    Routine

Smallpox    Urgent

Tetanus    Routine. Urgent if associated with injecting drug use

Tuberculosis    Routine. Urgent if healthcare worker, or suspected cluster or multi-drug resistant

Typhus    Routine

Viral haemorrhagic fever (VHF)    Urgent

Whooping cough    Urgent if diagnosed in acute phase. Routine in later diagnosis

Yellow fever    Routine. Urgent if acquired in UK

 

400

What journal did Andrew Wakefield publish his later disproven paper claiming the MMR vaccine causes autism in 1998?

Lancet- he performed a series of tests on 12 children with autism and chronic enterocolitis. He reported it appeared they started having features of autism after the MMR vaccine. This was very anecdotal evidence based on parents perceptions about when the issues started. This caused a very big media response that generated a lot of fear amongst parents and uncertainty amongst doctors

500

Name all the diseases the 6 in 1 vaccine (that baby receives at 8 and 12 weeks) protects against

Diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, polio, haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib) and hepatitis B

500

Which UK innovation is aimed at enhancing vaccine access in low-resource settings by removing reliance on cold-chain storage?

A. UKHSA’s 100‑Days Mission
B. VMIC in Oxfordshire
C. Stablepharma’s “fridge-free” vaccine platform
D. Gavi funding cut initiatives

Stablepharma’s “fridge-free” vaccine platform
Explanation:
Stablepharma, based in Bath, is developing thermostable (fridge-free) vaccines like a tetanus-diphtheria booster, using sugar-glass technology to eliminate cold-chain

500

The basic reproduction number (R₀) of a novel virus is estimated to be 4. What is the minimum percentage of the population that must be immune to achieve herd immunity?

75% 

Herd Immunity Threshold (HIT)= (1- 1/Ro)x100

=(1− 1/4 )×100=0.75×100=75%

500

Why do pts refuse Vaccines and what should as clinicians do about it?

Mistrust in vaccine safety, misinformation and conspiracy beliefs, religious/political beliefs, low perceived risk and access/barriers to vaccines

500

In what year did Edward Jenner develop the 1st vaccine?

1796