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Please note any child being bought by anyone other than a parent/guardian will need a written letter of consent.
Here’s a checklist of the vaccines that are routinely offered to everyone in the UK for free on the NHS, and the age at which you should ideally have them.
2 months:
3 months:
4 months:
Between 12 and 13 months:
3 years and 4 months, or soon after:
Around 12-13 years:
Around 13-18 years:
There will also be a catch-up vaccination programme for current school year 10 students through schools from January 2017. The Men ACWY vaccine will also be added to the routine adolescent schools programme (school year 9 and 10) from autumn 2016, alongside the 3-in-1 teenage booster, and as a direct replacement for the Men C vaccination.
65 and over:
Click here for the recommended HPA vaccination schedule
Influenza – flu – is a highly infectious and potentially serious illness caused by influenza viruses. Each year the make-up of the seasonal flu vaccine is designed to protect against the influenza viruses that the World Health Organization decide are most likely to be circulating in the coming winter.
Regular immunisation (vaccination) is given free of charge to the following at-risk people, to protect them from seasonal flu:
It is recommended that all pregnant women have the flu vaccine, whatever stage of pregnancy they’re in. This is because there is good evidence that pregnant women have an increased risk of developing complications if they get flu, particularly from the H1N1 strain.
Studies have shown that the flu vaccine can be safely and effectively given during any trimester of pregnancy. The vaccine does not carry risks for either the mother or baby. In fact, studies have shown that mothers who have had the vaccine while pregnant pass some protection to their babies, which lasts for the first few months of their lives.
All pregnant women are eligible for the whooping cough vaccine from week 16 of their pregnancy. The ideal time to have the vaccine is between weeks 16 and 32, but the sooner you get it the better. This means there’s more time for your body to make antibodies and for these to be passed to your unborn baby.
Children’s Flu vaccination
As per previous years 2 and 3 year olds will be offered a flu vaccine at their surgery.
Children older than 3 on the 1st September will be vaccinated at school. Children under 2 years of age whom have a clinical need for the flu vaccine, will be eligible for a different flu vaccine.