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Wales Online
Wales Online
Health
Mark Smith

Parents urged to continue taking children to immunisation appointments during lockdown

Parents are being urged to continue taking their children to immunisation appointments when invited during the Covid-19 lockdown.

Public Health Wales said ensuring children are up to date with their vaccines is vital in preventing outbreaks of serious childhood diseases including whooping cough, measles, meningitis, and pneumonia.

Dr Richard Roberts, head of the vaccine preventable diseases programme at Public Health Wales, said: "Immunisation programmes prevent avoidable GP appointments and hospital admissions because of vaccine-preventable diseases.

"Keeping children out of hospital is especially important during our response to Covid-19.

"Therefore I am urging the parents and carers of infants and pre-school children, and all pregnant women, to please continue to attend their routine immunisation sessions when contacted by their general practice or child health clinic.

"Social distancing measures are in place to protect you and the nursing staff that administer the vaccines and appropriate infection control procedures are being followed.

"Your local health visitor will be able to offer advice and support for parents and pregnant women can obtain advice on immunisation from their midwife."

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The Welsh Government wrote to all general practitioners in March to emphasise the importance of continuing immunisation programmes during the response to Covid-19. Practices have put in place arrangements to safely offer immunisation clinics.

GP surgeries throughout Wales have put in place measures to ensure that vaccination clinics operate in "clean" areas that are physically separated from ill patients.

Prior to attending a vaccination session patients will be contacted to check they are well and instructed not to attend if they are unwell or self-isolating due to suspected Covid-19 infection.

Professor Sally Holland, Children’s Commissioner for Wales, added: “These are strange and uncertain times for us all but one thing remains unchanged: the health and wellbeing of our children must remain a priority.

"Although services may look different and the way we access those services will look and feel different they’re still there to help protect us.

"I'd encourage all parents and carers to access those, in line with government social distancing rules, to ensure that all our children, despite what’s happening across the world currently, have the very best start in life."

In Wales certain immunisation programmes have been suspended since March 17 to allow available NHS resources to be directed to the effort to combat Covid-19.

The paused immunisation programmes include school age programmes such as teenage boosters and human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines, the shingles vaccination for those aged 70 to 79, and travel vaccinations.

However high and very high-priority schemes for infants and pre-school children and pregnant women are unaffected by coronavirus measures.

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