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Hepatitis A Vaccine: What You Need to Know [2025]

Current Supporting Files Public Domain
File Language:
English


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  • Alternative Title:
    Hepatitis A Vaccine: What You Need to Know [2025] [English] ; Vaccine Information Statement: Hepatitis A Vaccine: What You Need to Know [2025]
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  • Description:
    A VIS or Vaccine Information Statement is a document, produced by CDC, that informs vaccine recipients – or their parents or legal representatives – about the benefits and risks of a vaccine they are receiving. All vaccine providers, public or private, are required by the National Vaccine Childhood Injury Act (NCVIA – 42 U.S.C. § 300aa-26) to give the appropriate VIS to the patient (or parent or legal representative) prior to every dose of specific vaccines. The appropriate VIS must be given prior to the vaccination, and must be given prior to each dose of a multi-dose series. It must be given regardless of the age of the recipient: from https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/hcp/about-vis/index.html.

    VISs have been translated into about 40 languages. These can be found on the website of CDC's partner, https://www.immunize.org/vis/. Not every VIS has been translated into every language.

    Why get vaccinated? Hepatitis A vaccine can prevent hepatitis A. Hepatitis A is a serious liver disease. It is usually spread through close, personal contact with an infected person or when a person unknowingly ingests the virus from objects, food, or drinks that are contaminated by small amounts of stool (poop) from an infected person. Most adults with hepatitis A have symptoms, including fatigue, low appetite, stomach pain, nausea, and jaundice (yellow skin or eyes, dark urine, light-colored bowel movements). Most children less than 6 years of age do not have symptoms. A person infected with hepatitis A can transmit the disease to other people even if he or she does not have any symptoms of the disease. Most people who get hepatitis A feel sick for several weeks, but they usually recover completely and do not have lasting liver damage. In rare cases, hepatitis A can cause liver failure and death; this is more common in people older than 50 years and in people with other liver diseases. Hepatitis A vaccine has made this disease much less common in the United States. However, outbreaks of hepatitis A among unvaccinated people still happen.

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    Public Domain
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  • Pages in Document:
    2 pdf pages
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  • Main Document Checksum:
    urn:sha-512:31352beea3ad9b4e4648863caaf1ec50cc86c078ea82a9beb91a4fd40ddb96b730d8b4840de6a544f3d0a9ff1b41f97ea06555f2f6fa43d66f087fd4c601ff83
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    Filetype[PDF - 184.71 KB ]
File Language:
English
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