Childhood Immunization as a Tool to Address Health Disparities
Presented on .
One of the challenges for public health in the 21st is reducing and ultimately eliminating health disparities, domestically and globally. Infectious diseases in childhood can lead to complications, disability, and death. Protecting all children from vaccine-preventable diseases is a public health mandate, requiring the elimination of disparities that put some children at higher risk. Childhood immunization is a proven public health intervention that protects our nation and our children.
This session of Grand Rounds explored ways that immunization efforts have served to reduce disparities in childhood infectious diseases, demonstrating an effective and cost-effective tool for advancing health equity. Vaccines protect both the people who receive them and those with whom they come in contact. Vaccines are responsible for the control of many infectious diseases that were once common in the United States and around the world. Vaccine-preventable diseases have a costly impact, resulting from doctor’s visits, hospitalizations, and premature deaths.
Viewers learned about how immunization programs have positively affected children’s health, as experts explored public health, clinical, and policy implications of vaccinating children.
Dr. John Iskander and Marian McDonald discuss methods to further address health disparities through childhood immunizations:
- Knowledge of disease outbreaks and patterns in the community
- Learning the culture and language of population served
- Streamlined immunization visits
- Chesley Richards, MD, MPH
- Director, Immunization Services Division
National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, CDC
- Trudy V. Murphy, MD
- Team Lead, Vaccine Research and Policy, Division of Viral Hepatitis
National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD TB Prevention, CDC
- Thomas W. Hennessy, MD, MPH
- Director, Arctic Investigations Program
Division of Preparedness and Emerging Infections
National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, CDC
- Alan R. Hinman, MD, MPH
- Director for Programs, Center for Vaccine Equity
The Task Force for Global Health
- Tanja Popovic, MD, PhD
- Scientific Director
- John Iskander, MD, MPH
- Deputy Scientific Director
- Susan Laird, MSN, RN
- Communications Director
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Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most common sexually transmitted infection in the US. There are more than 40 HPV types. Some types cause cancers, others cause genital warts. Find out how CDC is working with other agencies to achieve high vaccinations levels and reduce the burden of HPV-associated diseases.