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General recommendations on immunization; recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP)

TLDR
This revision of the General Recommendations on Immunization updates the 1989 statement and changes in the immunization schedule for infants and children include recommendations that the third dose of oral polio vaccine be administered routinely at 6 months of age rather than at age 15 months.
Abstract
This report is a revision of General Recommendations on Immunization and updates the 2002 statement by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) (CDC. General recommendations on immunization: recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices and the American Academy of Family Physicians. MMWR 2002;51[No. RR-2]). This report is intended to serve as a general reference on vaccines and immunization. The principal changes include 1) expansion of the discussion of vaccination spacing and timing; 2) an increased emphasis on the importance of injection technique/age/body mass in determining appropriate needle length; 3) expansion of the discussion of storage and handling of vaccines, with a table defining the appropriate storage temperature range for inactivated and live vaccines; 4) expansion of the discussion of altered immunocompetence, including new recommendations about use of live-attenuated vaccines with therapeutic monoclonal antibodies; and 5) minor changes to the recommendations about vaccination during pregnancy and vaccination of internationally adopted children, in accordance with new ACIP vaccine-specific recommendations for use of inactivated influenza vaccine and hepatitis B vaccine. The most recent ACIP recommendations for each specific vaccine should be consulted for comprehensive discussion. This report, ACIP recommendations for each vaccine, and other information about vaccination can be accessed at CDC's National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases (proposed) (formerly known as the National Immunization Program) website at http//:www.cdc.gov/nip.

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References
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Rotavirus Infection in Infants as Protection against Subsequent Infections

TL;DR: In infants, natural rotavirus infection confers protection against subsequent infection, which increases with each new infection and reduces the severity of the diarrhea.
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Rotavirus gene structure and function.

TL;DR: Detailed analyses with recently characterized immunologic and gene probes and new animal models can be expected to provide a basic understanding of what regulates the primary interactions of these viruses with the gastrointestinal tract and the subsequent responses of infected hosts.
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Rotavirus disease in Finnish children: use of numerical scores for clinical severity of diarrhoeal episodes.

TL;DR: 65 episodes of rotavirus diarrhoea, detected during a longitudinal follow-up of 336 infants from birth to 24-32 months of age, were analyzed for clinical symptoms and a 0-20 point numerical score was devised according to the distribution of clinical features in the patients.
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Clinical immunity after neonatal rotavirus infection. A prospective longitudinal study in young children.

TL;DR: It is concluded that neonatal rotavirus infection does not confer immunity against reinfection but does protect against the development of clinically severe disease during reinfections.
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