HSE launches children's flu vaccine campaign

The HSE has launched the first children’s flu vaccine campaign in Ireland.

This autumn, children aged 2-12 years will be offered the flu vaccine free of charge. Your GP or pharmacist will give the vaccine using a spray up your child’s nose (nasal vaccine).

The flu vaccine will help protect your child against flu and reduce the spread of flu to others, for example their brothers and sisters, parents and grandparents. If enough children are vaccinated against flu, fewer children and adults will need to see their doctor or need treatment in hospital because of flu. This is very important for health services especially during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Flu vaccine heroes, Megan Ayres (9) and Evelyn Ayres (6) from Meath, got their flu vaccine to protect themselves and their Grandma, Geraldine Murtagh (pictured above).

Symptoms of flu in children include a high temperature, muscle pains, headache and extreme tiredness (fatigue). They may also have a dry cough and sore throat. It may be difficult to tell the symptoms of flu from symptoms of Covid-19. Children who are sick with flu miss days in crèche, childcare and school.

They also miss out on their usual activities such as hobbies and sports. Children carry the flu virus in their system longer than adults do, and children can spread the flu virus easily to other children and to vulnerable people around them.

The HSE said children are more likely than adults to get severe complications of flu. Over the last ten years in Ireland 4,750 children need to be admitted to hospital because of complications of flu. 183 of these then had to go to intensive care, and, sadly 41 children died. Children with chronic health conditions are most at risk of the serious complications of flu.

Dr Colm Henry, Chief Clinical Officer of the HSE said: “The flu vaccine for children is a very safe vaccine and has been given to children in the US since 2003 and in the UK since 2013. The flu vaccine helps your child’s immune system to produce antibodies that fight infection, and it will not result in your child getting the flu. If your child has had the flu vaccine and they come into contact with flu virus, these antibodies attack the virus and stop children from getting sick.”

Dr Chantal Migone, Specialist in Public Health Medicine with the HSE’s National Immunisation Office explains what you can expect: “Your GP or pharmacist will give the vaccine using a spray up your child’s nose. They will spray once in each nostril. There is no need to take a deep breath or sniff, your child can breathe normally while they are getting the vaccine.

"The vaccine is absorbed very quickly and it is pain free. So, if your child sneezes or gets a runny nose after the vaccine, there is no need to repeat the dose, or to worry that it won’t work. The most common side effects are mild, your child may get a runny or blocked nose, headache or muscle aches. Some children get a fever (temperature) after the vaccine, but it is usually mild and goes away on its own.”

Paul Reid, CEO of the HSE said: “The HSE has purchased 600,000 doses of the nasal flu vaccine (LAIV) for children aged 2-12 years old. I would encourage all parents to avail of the free vaccine for your children to protect themselves and to protect others by reducing the spread of flu. This is so important for our health services, especially this winter.”

Adrian and Nora O’Hare’s daughter Aralynn got the flu in Feb 2018 when she was 4 years old. Aralynn was an active and healthy child, but after developing a bacterial infection on her lungs as a complication of the flu, she spent a month in ICU in Crumlin. Aralynn’s parents urged others to avail of the children’s flu vaccine:

“Our whole family will get the flu vaccine this year, and I would encourage anyone to get their kids vaccinated against the flu. It’s so quick and now that it’s free there is no excuse. If it can save one family what Aralynn and our family went through it’s so worth it.”

A very small number of children will not be able to get the nasal flu vaccine for medical reasons. Your child should not get the nasal flu vaccine if they:

· have had a severe allergic reaction to a previous dose of the flu vaccine or any of its ingredients

· have severe asthma or if they have been wheezy or needed their inhaler more than usual in the three days before the vaccination

· are taking medicines called salicylates, which include aspirin

· have a severely weakened immune system because of certain medical conditions or treatments

· are living with someone who has a severely weakened immune system (such as a person who is in isolation because of a recent bone marrow transplant)

If your child cannot get the flu vaccine using a nasal spray, your GP or pharmacist will talk to you about giving your child a different flu vaccine, which is given by injection.

The HSE has developed easy read guides in English and translated them into Arabic, French, Romanian, Russian, Urdu, Slovak and Czech.They have also worked with the COVID World Service to produce videos with GPs around the country.

For more see https://www.hse.ie/eng/health/immunisation/pubinfo/flu-vaccination/information/

The HSE also urged all adults in at-risk groups to get their flu vaccine. If you are at risk of the complications of flu, the flu vaccine is available to you free of charge from a GP or pharmacist.

The flu vaccine is also available free of charge to healthcare workers and carers, to protect them and to prevent the spread of flu to the vulnerable people they care for.