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Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages 53-57 (March 2003)


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Communicating the benefits of combination vaccines to parents and health care providers☆☆

Mary Beth Koslap-Petraco, MS, APRN-BC, CPNP, Tamra Parsons, MSN, CPNP

Abstract 

Infants may receive as many as 5 separate injections at an office visit in order to comply with the 2002 childhood immunization schedule. Many parents and healthcare providers disagree with administering 4 or 5 injections at one visit, and therefore may delay some injections until another visit. This practice may lead to decreased compliance and can increase costs for the parent. New combination vaccines will help to simplify the immunization schedule, and health care providers will need to be able to address parental concerns regarding these vaccines. Nurses are often responsible for administering vaccines in the office setting, and therefore are also influential in deciding which vaccines should be ordered. The purpose of this article is to educate nurses on communicating the benefits of combination vaccines to parents and other healthcare providers. J Pediatr Health Care. (2003). 17, 53-57.

Mary Beth Koslap-Petraco is Child Health Coordinator at Suffolk County Department of Health Sciences, Amityville, Ny.

 Tamra Parsons is a Pediatric Nurse Practitioner at Wellstar North Cobb Pediatrics, Kennesaw, Ga.

☆☆ Reprint requests: Mary Beth Koslap-Petraco, MS, APRN-BC, CPNP, Coordinator, Child Health, Suffolk County Department of Health Sciences, 73 Ireland Place, Amityville, NY 11701; e-mail: PetracoNP@aol.com.

 0891-5245/2003/$30.00 + 0

PII: S0891-5245(03)00002-6

doi:10.1067/mph.2003.42


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