Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1644301> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 69 of
69
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1644301 subject Q7016015.
- Q1644301 abstract "A vaccination schedule is a series of vaccinations, including the timing of all doses, which may be either recommended or compulsory, depending on the country of residence. This topic can cause much controversy over whether or not it could impact health after dosage at an early ageA vaccine is an antigenic preparation used to produce active immunity to a disease, in order to prevent or reduce the effects of infection by any natural or "wild" pathogen. Many vaccines require multiple doses for maximum effectiveness, either to produce sufficient initial immune response or to boost response that fades over time. For example, tetanus vaccine boosters are often recommended every 10 years. Vaccine schedules are developed by governmental agencies or physicians groups to achieve maximum effectiveness using required and recommended vaccines for a locality while minimizing the number of health care system interactions. Over the past two decades, the recommended vaccination schedule has grown rapidly and become more complicated as many new vaccines have been developed.Some vaccines are recommended only in certain areas (countries, subnational areas, or at-risk populations) where a disease is common. For instance, yellow fever vaccination is on the routine vaccine schedule of French Guiana, is recommended in certain regions of Brazil but in the United States is only given to travelers heading to countries with a history of the disease. In developing countries, vaccine recommendations also take into account the level of health care access, the cost of vaccines and issues with vaccine availability and storage. Sample vaccination schedules discussed by the World Health Organization show a developed country using a schedule which extends over the first five years of a child's life and uses vaccines which cost over $700 including administration costs while a developing country uses a schedule providing vaccines in the first 9 months of life and costing only $25. This difference is due to the lower cost of health care, the lower cost of many vaccines provided to developing nations, and that more expensive vaccines, often for less common diseases, are not utilized.In 1900, the smallpox vaccine was the only one administered to children. By the early 1950s, children routinely received three vaccines, for protection against diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus and smallpox, and as many as five shots by two years of age. Since the mid-1980s, many vaccines have been added to the schedule. As of 2009, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) now recommends vaccination against at least fourteen diseases. By two years of age, U.S. children receive as many as 24 vaccine injections, and might receive up to five shots during one visit to the doctor. The use of combination vaccine products means that, as of 2013, the United Kingdom's immunization program consists of 9 injections by the age of two, rather than 22 if vaccination for each disease was given as a separate injection.".
- Q1644301 thumbnail Polish_call_for_vaccination.png?width=300.
- Q1644301 wikiPageExternalLink vaccines.
- Q1644301 wikiPageExternalLink vaccination-schedule-age-checklist.aspx.
- Q1644301 wikiPageExternalLink scheduleselect.cfm.
- Q1644301 wikiPageExternalLink parent-ver-sch-0-6yrs.pdf.
- Q1644301 wikiPageExternalLink download.
- Q1644301 wikiPageExternalLink catchup-schedule-pr.pdf.
- Q1644301 wikiPageExternalLink national_immunisation_schedule_july_2014_0_0.pdf.
- Q1644301 wikiPageExternalLink en.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q103537.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q1037810.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q117749.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q11789728.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q12136.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q12204.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q12214.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q134649.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q134808.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q134859.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q145.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q14538008.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q1519099.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q154874.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q160105.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q166231.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q170065.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q17082548.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q17149595.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q178559.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q1812946.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q192995.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q221179.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q2721987.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q2920497.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q326663.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q3553093.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q368134.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q383260.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q4007169.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q4007170.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q4411598.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q44727.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q47790.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q5628865.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q583725.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q6804161.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q6817090.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q6935478.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q7016015.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q7180724.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q7375928.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q737712.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q738292.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q7817.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q7861081.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q798309.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q8051876.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q8074572.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q853451.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q898701.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q900189.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q908104.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q908600.
- Q1644301 wikiPageWikiLink Q918396.
- Q1644301 comment "A vaccination schedule is a series of vaccinations, including the timing of all doses, which may be either recommended or compulsory, depending on the country of residence. This topic can cause much controversy over whether or not it could impact health after dosage at an early ageA vaccine is an antigenic preparation used to produce active immunity to a disease, in order to prevent or reduce the effects of infection by any natural or "wild" pathogen.".
- Q1644301 label "Vaccination schedule".
- Q1644301 depiction Polish_call_for_vaccination.png.