Diphtheria
- Bacteria spread by respiratory droplets.
- Causes severe throat and breathing difficulties.
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- Up to 1 in 7 patients die.
- Bacteria releases a toxin which can produce nerve paralysis and heart failure.
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- About 1 in 10 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site (DTPa/dTpa vaccine).
- Fever (DTPa/dTpa vaccine).
- Booster doses of DTPa may occasionally be associated with extensive swelling of the limb, but this resolves completely within a few days.
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Hepatitis A
- Virus spread by contact or ingestion of faecally contaminated water/food or through contact with faecal material of a person infected with hepatitis A.
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At least 7 in 10 adult patients develop:
- jaundice (yellowing of skin and eyes)
- fever
- anorexia (decreased appetite)
- nausea
- vomiting
- hepatic (liver) pain
- malaise (tiredness).
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- About 1 in 5 will have local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Hepatitis B
- Virus spread mainly by blood, sexual contact or from mother to newborn baby.
- Causes acute hepatitis (liver infection) or chronic infection (‘carrier’).
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- About 1 in 4 chronic carriers will develop cirrhosis or liver cancer.
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- About 1 in 20 will have local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
- 2 in 100 will have fever.
- Anaphylaxis occurs in about 1 in 1 million.
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Hib
- Bacteria spread by respiratory droplets.
Hib can cause:
- meningitis (infection of the tissues surround the brain)
- epiglottitis (respiratory obstruction)
- septicaemia (infection of the blood stream)
- septic arthritis (infection in the joints).
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- About 1 in 20 meningitis patients die, and about 1 in 4 survivors has permanent brain damage.
- Epiglottitis is rapidly and invariably fatal without treatment.
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- About 1 in 20 will have local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
- About 1 in 50 has fever.
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Human papillomavirus
- Virus spread mainly through sexual contant.
- Up to 80% of the population will be infected with HPV at some time in their lives.
Some HPV types are associated with development of cancer. |
- About 7 in 10 cervical cancers (worldwide) have been associated with HPV-16.
- About 1 in 6 cervical cancers (worldwide) have been associated with HPV-18.
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- About 8 in 10 people will have pain at injection site.
- About 2 in 10 will will have local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
- Up to 3 in 10 people may experience:
- headaches
- fever
- muscle aches
- tiredness.
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Influenza
- Virus spread by respiratory droplets.
- About 1 in 10 to 1 in 5 people will get influenza every year.
- Influenza causes:
- fever
- muscle and joint pains
- pneumonia.
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- Influenza causes an estimated 3000 deaths in people older than 50 years of age each year in Australia.
- Causes increased hospitalisation in the very young (under 5 and the elderly.
- Other high risk groups include:
- pregnant women
- people who are obese
- diabetics
- others with certain chronic medical conditions.
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- About 1 in 10 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
- Fever occurs in about 1 in 10 children aged 6 months to 3 years.
- Guillain-Barré syndrome occurs in about 1 in 1 million.
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Measles
- Highly infectious virus spread by respiratory droplets.
- Causes fever, cough and rash.
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- About 1 in 15 children with measles develops pneumonia and 1 in 1000 develops encephalitis (brain inflammation).
- For every 10 children who develop measles encephalitis, 1 dies and many have permanent brain damage.
- About 1 in 100 000 develops SSPE (brain degeneration), which is always fatal.
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- About 1 in 10 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
- About 1 in 20 develops a rash, which is non-infectious.
- Low platelet count (causing bruising or bleeding) occurs after the first dose of MMR vaccine at a rate of about 1 in 20 000 to 30 000.
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Meningococcal infection
- Bacteria spread by respiratory droplets.
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- Causes septicaemia (infection of the blood stream) and meningitis (infection of the tissues surrounding the brain).
- About 1 in 10 patients dies. Of those that survive, 1 to 2 in 10 have permanent long-term problems, such as loss of limbs and brain damage.
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- About 1 in 10 has:
- local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site
- fever
- irritability
- loss of appetite
- headaches (conjugate vaccines).
- About 1 in 2 has a local reaction (polysaccharide vaccine).
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Mumps
- Virus spread by saliva.
- Causes swollen neck and salivary glands, and fever.
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- 1 in 5000 children develops encephalitis (brain inflammation).
- 1 in 5 males (adolescent/adult) develop inflammation of the testes.
- Occasionally, mumps causes infertility or permanent deafness.
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- About 1 in 100 may develop swelling of the salivary glands.
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Pertussis
- Bacteria spread by respiratory droplets.
- Causes ‘whooping cough’, with prolonged cough lasting up to 3 months.
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- About 1 in 125 babies under the age of 6 months with whooping cough dies from pneumonia or brain damage.
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- About 1 in 10 has:
- local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site
- fever (DTPa/dTpa vaccine).
- Booster doses of DTPa may occasionally be associated with extensive swelling of the limb, but this resolves completely within a few days.
- Serious adverse events are very rare
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Pneumococcal infection
- Bacteria spread by respiratory droplets.
- Causes:
- septicaemia (infection of the blood stream)
- meningitis (infection of the tissues surrounding the brain)
- occasionally other infections.
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- About 3 in 10 people with meningitis die.
- One-third of all pneumonia cases and up to half of pneumonia hospitalisations in adults is caused by pneumococcal infection.
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- About 1 in 5 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site or fever (conjugate vaccine).
- Up to 1 in 2 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site (polysaccharide vaccine).
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Polio
- Virus spread in faeces and saliva
- Causes:
- may progress to paralysis.
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- While many infections cause no symptoms, up to 3 in 10 patients with paralytic polio die, and many patients who survive are permanently paralysed.
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- Local redness, pain and swelling at the injection site are common.
- Up to 1 in 10 has fever, crying and decreased appetite.
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Rotavirus
- Virus spread by faecal–oral route.
- Causes gastroenteritis, which can be severe.
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- Illness may range from mild diarrhoea to severe dehydrating diarrhoea and fever, which can result in death.
- Before the vaccine was introduced:
- 10 000 children were hospitalised each year
- 115 000 needed GP visits each year
- 22 000 required an emergency department visit each year.
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- Up to 3 in 100 may develop diarrhoea or vomiting in the week after receiving the vaccine.
- About 1 in 17 000 babies may develop intussusception in the first few weeks after the first or second vaccine doses.
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Rubella
- Virus spread by respiratory droplets.
- causes fever, rash and swollen glands, but causes severe malformations in babies of infected pregnant women.
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- Patients typically develop a rash, painful swollen glands and painful joints.
- 1 in 3000 develops low platelet count (causing bruising or bleeding)
- 1 in 6000 develops encephalitis (brain inflammation).
- Up to 9 in 10 babies infected during the first trimester of pregnancy will have a major congenital abnormality (including deafness, blindness or heart defects)
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- About 1 in 10 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
- About 1 in 20 has swollen glands, stiff neck or joint pains.
- About 1 in 20 has a rash, which is non-infectious.
- Low platelet count (causing bruising or bleeding) occurs after the1st dose of MMR vaccine, at a rate of about 1 in 20 000 to 30 000.
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Tetanus
- Caused by toxin of bacteria in soil.
- Causes painful muscle spasms, convulsions, lockjaw.
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- About 2 in 100 patients die.
- The risk is greatest for the very young or old.
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- About 1 in 10 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site, or fever (DTPa/dTpa vaccine).
- Booster doses of DTPa may occasionally be associated with extensive swelling of the limb, but this resolves completely within a few days.
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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Varicella
- Highly contagious virus.
- Causes low-grade fever and vesicular rash (fluid-filled spots).
- Reactivation of the virus later in life causes herpes zoster (shingles).
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- One in 100 000 patients develops encephalitis (brain inflammation).
- Infection during pregnancy can result in congenital malformations in the baby.
- Infection in the mother around delivery time results in severe infection in the newborn baby in up to one-third of cases.
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- About 1 in 5 has a local reaction or fever.
- About 3 to 5 in 100 may develop a mild varicella-like rash.
- Serious adverse events are very rare.
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