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Home > Is This Safe When Breastfeeding? > Medications Breastfeeding and Vaccines
Breastfeeding does not affect the safety of vaccinations for mom or baby. Although breastfeeding passes many immune factors to baby, breastfeeding should not be considered a substitute for immunization. Research indicates that when breastfed babies are vaccinated, they will produce higher levels of antibodies in comparison to formula fed babies. According to the US Centers for Disease Control document General Recommendations on Immunization (February 8, 2002) [PDF version for printing]:
Per the US Centers for Disease Control document Use of Anthrax Vaccine in the United States (December 15, 2000):
CDC Update: Interim Recommendations for Antimicrobial Prophylaxis for Children and Breastfeeding Mothers and Treatment of Children with Anthrax (November 16, 2001) discusses the use of antibiotics for prevention of anthrax in breastfeeding mothers and children.
Whether attenuated vaccine VZV is excreted in human milk and, if so, whether the infant could be infected are not known. Most live vaccines have not been demonstrated to be secreted in breast milk. Attenuated rubella vaccine virus has been detected in breast milk but has produced only asymptomatic infection in the nursing infant. Therefore, varicella vaccine may be considered for a nursing mother. ACIP, Prevention of Varicella, pp. 19-20. Is it necessary to wean before getting the chicken pox vaccine? by Debbi Donovan, IBCLC
Many moms wonder specifically about the flu vaccine. This, like other vaccines, can be administered to nursing mothers. According to Prevention and Control of Influenza: Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), from the US Centers for Disease Control:
There are currently two forms of the flu vaccine:
The CDC indicates that either form of the vaccine is acceptable for a breastfeeding mother, as long as she otherwise meets requirements for receiving the vaccine. US Centers for Disease Control has general information on the current Flu Season and the CDC maintains a Weekly Flu Map for the US. See also:'Flu injections and breastfeeding by Wendy Jones PhD, MRPharmS The flu: What you need to know to protect your family.
Per the US Centers for Disease Control document FAQs on MMR Vaccine:
The US Centers for Disease Control, recommends that breastfeeding mothers not get the smallpox vaccination. There is no evidence that vaccinia virus is transmitted in breast milk (see the above CDC information on vaccinations in general). However, the concern is that the breastfed baby, due to close proximity to the mother, might come into physical contact with the vaccination site. Note that current guidelines recommend that any person who has been vaccinated with this vaccine (breastfeeding or not) avoid close physical contact with babies under a year old for 2-3 weeks (until the scab falls off) -- this would presumably affect all parents who hold, feed, care for, cuddle or sleep with their babies. Following are US Military guidelines for preventing exposure to
the vaccinia virus via contact with the vaccination site. Per the
US
Military Clinical Policy for the DoD Smallpox Vaccination Program
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Smallpox Vaccine: Pregnancy and Breastfeeding from the CDC US Military information on smallpox vaccination General Smallpox InformationSigns and Symptoms of Smallpox by Dana D. Sterner, RN, a general information article from Advance for Nurses Smallpox Vaccination Campaign: Benefits, Risks, Implications from Medscape Smallpox and Smallpox Vaccination from the New England Journal of Medicine
Do mom's vaccines protect her
breastfed baby? @ National Immunization Program (U.S.) from the Centers for Disease Control website U.S. Military Vaccines Web Site See also:Hahn-Zoric M, Fulconis F, Minoli I, et al. Antibody responses to parenteral and oral vaccines are impaired by conventional and low-protein formulas as compared to breast feeding. Acta Paediatr Scand 1990;79:1137--42.
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