managing-immunization-schedules

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Applies CDC pediatric immunization schedule with catch-up protocols and contraindication screening. Use when managing pediatric vaccines, scheduling catch-up immunizations, or screening for contraindications.

CaseMark By CaseMark schedule Updated 4/20/2026

name: managing-immunization-schedules language: en description: Applies CDC pediatric immunization schedule with catch-up protocols and contraindication screening. Use when managing pediatric vaccines, scheduling catch-up immunizations, or screening for contraindications. tags:

  • management
  • pediatrics metadata: author: casemark practice_areas:
    • Pediatrics
    • Neonatology
    • Adolescent Medicine document_types:
    • Management Report skill_modes:
    • Management
    • Coordination

Managing Immunization Schedules

Applies the ACIP/CDC recommended pediatric immunization schedule (birth through 18 years) with catch-up algorithms, minimum interval enforcement, contraindication and precaution screening, and documentation standards for state immunization registries.

Why This Skill Exists

The childhood immunization schedule contains 16 vaccine antigens delivered across 30+ doses by age 18, each with specific minimum ages, minimum intervals, and maximum number of doses. Catch-up schedules add another layer of complexity for under-immunized or internationally adopted children. A single missed contraindication check or interval miscalculation results in invalid doses that must be repeated. This skill enforces the ACIP-recommended schedule with built-in contraindication screening and interval validation.


Checkpoint A — Intake Verification

Required Intake Questions

  1. What is the child's date of birth and current age?
  2. What vaccines has the child received previously (documented records, not parental recall)?
  3. Is the child immunocompromised (HIV, primary immunodeficiency, chemotherapy, chronic steroids ≥ 14 days)?
  4. Is the child pregnant (for adolescents)?
  5. Has the child had a severe allergic reaction (anaphylaxis) to any vaccine or vaccine component?
  6. Does the child have a history of intussusception (rotavirus contraindication)?
  7. Does the child have a history of Guillain-Barré syndrome within 6 weeks of a prior dose?
  8. For influenza: does the child have egg allergy, and if so, what is the severity?
  9. Is the child currently ill (moderate-to-severe illness is a precaution; mild illness is not)?

Required Documents

  • Official immunization record (state registry, prior provider records, or international vaccination card)
  • Medical history with immune status
  • Allergy documentation with specific reactions
  • State-specific exemption forms (if applicable)

Parental recall alone is not acceptable documentation for prior doses. If no written record exists, the child should be considered unimmunized and start catch-up from scratch.


Step 1 — Routine Schedule: Birth Through 6 Years

Key Vaccine Series and Timing

Vaccine Doses Schedule Minimum Age (Dose 1)
Hepatitis B (HepB) 3 Birth, 1 mo, 6-18 mo Birth
Rotavirus (RV) 2-3 2, 4, (6) mo 6 weeks
DTaP 5 2, 4, 6, 15-18 mo, 4-6 yr 6 weeks
Hib 3-4 2, 4, (6), 12-15 mo 6 weeks
PCV15/PCV20 4 2, 4, 6, 12-15 mo 6 weeks
IPV 4 2, 4, 6-18 mo, 4-6 yr 6 weeks
Influenza Annual ≥ 6 months 6 months
MMR 2 12-15 mo, 4-6 yr 12 months
Varicella 2 12-15 mo, 4-6 yr 12 months
Hepatitis A (HepA) 2 12-23 mo (2-dose series, 6 mo apart) 12 months

Critical Minimum Intervals

  • HepB dose 1 to dose 2: minimum 4 weeks
  • HepB dose 2 to dose 3: minimum 8 weeks AND dose 3 no earlier than 24 weeks of age
  • DTaP doses 1-3: minimum 4 weeks apart
  • DTaP dose 3 to dose 4: minimum 6 months
  • Rotavirus: maximum age for dose 1 is 14 weeks 6 days; maximum age for final dose is 8 months 0 days (do NOT start or continue series after these ages)

Step 2 — Routine Schedule: 7 Through 18 Years

Adolescent Platform (11-12 Years)

Vaccine Doses Schedule
Tdap 1 Age 11-12 (preferred); minimum age 7 for catch-up
HPV 2-3 11-12 yr; 2 doses if started < 15 yr (0, 6-12 mo); 3 doses if started ≥ 15 yr (0, 1-2, 6 mo)
MenACWY 2 11-12 yr, booster at 16 yr
MenB 2-3 16-23 yr (shared clinical decision); or high-risk
Influenza Annual All ages ≥ 6 months

HPV Special Rules

  • 9-valent HPV (Gardasil 9) covers HPV types 6, 11, 16, 18, 31, 33, 45, 52, 58
  • 2-dose schedule only valid if series initiated before 15th birthday
  • Minimum interval between dose 1 and dose 2: 5 months (if < 15) or 4 weeks (dose 1-2 in 3-dose series)
  • Catch-up through age 26; shared clinical decision ages 27-45

Step 3 — Catch-Up Schedule Application

When a child is behind schedule:

Catch-Up Algorithm

  1. Identify the child's current age
  2. List all previously received valid doses (with dates)
  3. For each vaccine series, determine the number of remaining doses needed
  4. Apply minimum intervals between remaining doses (shorter intervals than routine are permitted in catch-up)
  5. Apply minimum ages for each dose
  6. Schedule the maximum number of vaccines per visit (there is no maximum number of simultaneous vaccines)

Key Catch-Up Rules

  • Doses given ≥ 4 days before the minimum age or minimum interval are valid ("4-day grace period")
  • Doses given > 4 days early are invalid and must be repeated
  • Live vaccines (MMR, varicella, LAIV) given on the same day are valid; if not same day, space by ≥ 28 days
  • There is no need to restart a series regardless of how long ago the last dose was given
  • Lapsed series: pick up where you left off, respecting minimum intervals

Internationally Adopted Children

  • Accept written documentation of vaccines only if schedule, intervals, and ages are consistent with ACIP standards
  • If documentation is questionable, either repeat the series or check serologic titers (measles, mumps, rubella, varicella, hepatitis B, hepatitis A, diphtheria, tetanus, polio)

Step 4 — Contraindication and Precaution Screening

True Contraindications (Do NOT Give)

Contraindication Applicable Vaccines
Anaphylaxis to prior dose That vaccine and all containing the causative component
Anaphylaxis to vaccine component (e.g., neomycin, gelatin, yeast) Vaccines containing that component
Severe immunodeficiency Live vaccines (MMR, varicella, LAIV, rotavirus, BCG)
Pregnancy Live vaccines (MMR, varicella, LAIV); HPV (precautionary)
Intussusception history Rotavirus
SCID (confirmed or suspected) Rotavirus
Encephalopathy within 7 days of prior DTaP dose Further DTaP doses (use DT instead)

Precautions (Evaluate Risk-Benefit)

  • Moderate-to-severe acute illness (defer until improvement; mild illness is NOT a reason to defer)
  • GBS within 6 weeks of prior dose of same vaccine
  • Reduced immune competence (dose may be given but response may be suboptimal)

Not Contraindications (Common Misconceptions)

  • Mild illness with or without low-grade fever
  • Current antibiotic therapy
  • Prematurity (vaccinate at chronological age, not corrected age — except HepB for infants < 2000g)
  • Breastfeeding
  • Family history of adverse events
  • Allergies to products not in the vaccine

Step 5 — Special Populations

Preterm Infants

  • Vaccinate at chronological age regardless of gestational age
  • Exception: HepB — if birth weight < 2000g AND mother is HBsAg-negative, delay first dose until 1 month of age or hospital discharge
  • If mother is HBsAg-positive: give HepB + HBIG within 12 hours of birth regardless of weight

Immunocompromised Children

  • No live vaccines (MMR, varicella, LAIV, rotavirus)
  • Inactivated vaccines generally safe but may have reduced immunogenicity
  • Household contacts should receive all routine vaccines including live vaccines (exception: do not give LAIV to household contacts of severely immunocompromised)
  • Reimmunize after stem cell transplant per IDSA/CDC guidelines

Asplenia (Functional or Anatomic)

  • Additional vaccines: MenACWY (2-dose primary), MenB, Hib (if not previously completed), PCV20
  • Annual influenza

Checkpoint B — Immunization Schedule Review

  • Immunization record obtained from official source (not parental recall alone)
  • All prior doses validated for minimum age and minimum interval
  • Invalid doses identified and scheduled for repeat
  • Today's vaccines selected per routine or catch-up schedule
  • Contraindication and precaution screening completed and documented
  • All vaccines administered documented with lot number, site, route, manufacturer, and VIS date
  • Vaccine Information Statements (VIS) provided to parent/guardian with documentation
  • State immunization registry updated
  • Next visit vaccines and date communicated to family
  • All [VERIFY] flags resolved or escalated

Quality Audit

Item Requirement Pass?
Record source Official immunization record used (not recall)
Dose validation Minimum age and interval verified for all prior doses
Schedule accuracy Correct vaccines selected for age and dose number
Contraindication screen All contraindications and precautions assessed
Simultaneous vaccines Multiple vaccines given per visit when due (no unnecessary delays)
Catch-up completeness All missing vaccines identified and scheduled
VIS documentation VIS provided and documented for each vaccine given
Registry update State registry entry completed
Live vaccine spacing Live vaccines same day or ≥ 28 days apart
No unexplained [VERIFY] tags All flagged items resolved or escalated

Guidelines

  • Follow ACIP Recommended Immunization Schedule updated annually (available at cdc.gov/vaccines/schedules)
  • Apply ACIP General Best Practice Guidelines for Immunization for interval, age, and contraindication rules
  • Use the CDC catch-up schedule and catch-up calculator for behind-schedule children
  • Follow the 4-day grace period rule per ACIP for minimum age and interval
  • Follow AAP Red Book (Report of the Committee on Infectious Diseases) for immunocompromised and special populations
  • Apply CDC Pink Book (Epidemiology and Prevention of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases) for vaccine-specific details
  • Vaccine Information Statements (VIS): required by federal law (National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act) before each dose
  • Report adverse events to VAERS (Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System)
  • Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP) table injuries should be documented and reported
  • This skill produces immunization documentation; it does not replace clinical judgment
Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/CaseMark/skills --skill managing-immunization-schedules
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