On-time immunization plays a vital role in protecting children and communities from serious diseases. The vaccine schedule is developed to offer protection from diseases right on time. It’s best to vaccinate a child before being exposed to diseases to reduce the risk of serious disease complications. View the schedules to see which vaccines recommends for each age group and talk to your child’s healthcare provider.

Yes. Vaccines are very safe. Currently, Millions of children safely receive vaccines each year. The most common side effects are very mild, such as pain or swelling at the injection site.

Vaccines can prevent infectious diseases that once killed or harmed many infants, children, and adults. Without vaccines, your child is at risk for getting seriously ill and suffering pain, disability, and even death from diseases like measles and whooping cough. The main risks associated with getting vaccines are side effects, which are almost always mild (redness and swelling at the injection site) and go away within a few days. Serious side effects after vaccination, such as a severe allergic reaction, are very rare and doctors and clinic staff are trained to deal with them. The disease-prevention benefits of getting vaccines are much greater than the possible side effects for almost all children. The only exceptions to this are cases in which a child has a serious chronic medical condition like cancer or a disease that weakens the immune system, or has had a severe allergic reaction to a previous vaccine dose.

Vaccines, like any medication, may cause some side effects. Most of these side effects are very minor, like soreness where the shot was given, fussiness, or a low-grade fever. These side effects typically only last a couple of days and are treatable. For example, you can apply a cool, wet washcloth on the sore area to ease discomfort.

Vaccines do not overload the immune system. Every day, a healthy baby’s immune system successfully fights off thousands of germs. Antigens are parts of germs that cause the body’s immune system to go to work to build antibodies, which fight off diseases.

The antigens in vaccines come from the germs themselves, but the germs are weakened or killed so they cannot cause serious illness. Even if babies receive several vaccinations in one day, vaccines contain only a tiny fraction of the antigens they encounter every day in their environment. Vaccines give your child the antibodies they need to fight off serious vaccine-preventable diseases.

The recommended schedule protects infants and children by providing protection early in life, before they come into contact with life-threatening diseases. Children receive vaccinations early because they are susceptible to diseases at a young age.

Talk with your child’s doctor, but children can usually get vaccinated even if they have a mild illness like a cold, earache, mild fever, or diarrhea. If the doctor says it is okay, your child can still get vaccinated.

Children do not receive any known benefits from following schedules that delay vaccines. Infants and young children who follow immunization schedules that spread out or leave out shots are at risk of developing diseases during the time you delay their shots.

Young children have the highest risk of having a serious case of disease that could cause hospitalization or death. Delaying or spreading out vaccine doses leaves your child unprotected during the time when they need vaccine protection the most. For example, diseases such as Hib or pneumococcus almost always occur in the first 2 years of a baby’s life. And some diseases, like hepatitis B and whooping cough (pertussis), are more serious when babies get them.

Yes, even breastfed babies need to be protected with vaccines at the recommended ages. The immune system is not fully developed at birth, which puts newborns at greater risk for infections.

Breast milk provides important protection from some infections as your baby’s immune system is developing. For example, babies who are breastfed have a lower risk of ear infections, respiratory tract infections, and diarrhea. However, breast milk does not protect children against all diseases. Even in breastfed infants, vaccines are the most effective way to prevent many diseases.

No, even young children who are cared for at home can be exposed to vaccine preventable diseases, so it’s important for them to get all their vaccines at the recommended ages. Children can catch these illnesses from any number of people or places, including from parents, brothers or sisters, visitors to their home, on playgrounds or even at the grocery store. Regardless of whether your baby is cared for outside the home, your baby comes in contact with people throughout the day, some of whom may have a vaccine-preventable disease.

Many of these diseases can be especially dangerous to young children, so it is safest to vaccinate your child at the recommended ages.

No. Before entering school, young children can be exposed to vaccine-preventable diseases. Children under age 5 are especially susceptible to diseases because their immune systems have not built up the necessary defenses to fight infection.

Vaccines are recommended throughout our lives to protect against serious diseases. As protection from childhood vaccines wears off, adolescents need vaccines that will extend protection. Adolescents need protection from additional infections as well, before the risk of exposure increases.

Getting every recommended dose of each vaccine provides your child with the best protection possible. Depending on the vaccine, your child will need more than one dose to build high enough immunity to help prevent disease or to boost immunity that fades over time. Your child may also receive more than one dose to make sure they are protected if they did not get immunity from a first dose, or to protect them against germs that change over time, like flu. Every dose is important because each protects against an infectious disease that can be especially serious for infants and very young children.

Babies may get some temporary protection from mom during the last few weeks of pregnancy, but only for diseases to which mom is immune. Breastfeeding may also protect your baby temporarily from minor infections, like colds. These antibodies do not last long, leaving your baby vulnerable to disease.

Some vaccine-preventable diseases, like pertussis (whooping cough) and chickenpox, remain common in the United States. On the other hand, other diseases vaccines prevent are no longer common in this country because of vaccines. If we stopped vaccinating, the few cases we have in the United States could very quickly become tens or hundreds of thousands of cases. Even though many serious vaccine-preventable diseases are uncommon in the United States, some are common in other parts of the world. Even if your family does not travel internationally, you could come into contact with international travelers anywhere in your community. Children who don’t receive all vaccinations and are exposed to a disease can become seriously sick and spread it through a community.

Edit Template

Your child needs vaccines as they grow!

ALL children should be immunized at this age

SOME children should get this dose of vaccine or preventive antibody at this age

Parents should talk to their health care provider to decide if this vaccine is right for their child

Recommended Vaccines Birth 1 Month 2 Months 4 Months 6 Months 7 Months 8 Months 12 Months 15 Months 18 Months 19 Months 20-23 Months 2-3 Years 4-6 Years
RSV antibody Depends on mother’s RSV vaccine status Depends on child’s health status
Hepatitis B Dose 1 Dose 2 Dose 3
Rotavirus Dose 1 Dose 2 Dose 3
DTaP Dose 1 Dose 2 Dose 3 Dose 4 Dose 5
Hib Dose 1 Dose 2 Dose 3 Dose 4
Pneumococcal Dose 1 Dose 2 Dose 3 Dose 4
Polio Dose 1 Dose 2 Dose 3 Dose 4
COVID-19
Influenza/Flu Every year. Two doses for some children
MMR Dose 1 Dose 2
Chickenpox Dose 1 Dose 2
Hepatitis A 2 doses separated by 6 months

Older children and teens need vaccines too!

ALL children in age group should get the vaccine

ALL children in age group can get the vaccine

Parents should talk to their health care provider to decide if this vaccine is right for their child

SOME children in age group should get the vaccine

Recommended Vaccines 7 Years 8 Years 9 Years 10 Years 11 Years 12 Years 13 Years 14 Years 15 Years 16 Years 17 Years 18 Years
HPV
Tdap
Meningococcal ACWY
Meningococcal B
Influenza / Flu Every year. Two doses
for some children
Every year
COVID-19
Mpox
Dengue ONLY if living in a place where dengue is common AND has laboratory test confirming past dengue infection
About Vaccines for your Children – CDC.gov – https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines-children/about/index.html