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Irish GP weighs up pros, cons and costs of vaccinating your kids for chicken pox

Vaccinating children against chickenpox is only available here if parents pay for it, but how effective is the jab and is it worth the money? Dr Cliona Murphy explains all

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The chickenpox vaccination isn’t currently offered to all children as part of Ireland’s immunisation schedule, but you can pay for your child to have it once they are over 12 months old. So, the big question is: should you? We look at the latest facts, with expert advice from Cork GP Dr Cliona Murphy.

A growing number of countries have already made the chickenpox vaccine part of their routine childhood vaccination programmes, including the US, Canada, Australia, Japan and Germany. And while Ireland has yet to add it to the State’s childhood immunisation programme, an assessment is currently underway following a request from the Department of Health, which was supported by the National Immunisation Advisory Committee (Niac). So what are your options currently, and what do you need to know before deciding whether to give your child the vaccine?

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Isn’t It A Mild Childhood Illness?

Chickenpox is a common childhood infection and having chickenpox usually confers lifelong immunity in an immunocompetent individual (i.e someone who is not immunocompromised.)

However, some children who contract chickenpox will require hospitalisation. Even without complications, it is an unpleasant infection that generally will cause the infected person to experience high temperatures, headache, blistering rash, tiredness for about a week, and can result in an onward spread. It also results in children missing school and daycare and parents having to stay home from work.

People at higher risk of complications include infants, those who are pregnant, those with a weakened immune system, adults and elderly people. Complications of chickenpox virus are mild in most cases. However, some can be severe in a small number of cases and they include skin infections, pneumonia, encephalitis (swelling of the brain), sepsis (bloodstream infection), dehydration and very rarely death.

Effects Of The Vaccine

Most children don’t have any side effects from the shot. But the side effects that do occur are usually mild and can include: soreness, redness, or swelling where the shot was given, fever and mild rash.

The vaccine contains a small amount of the chickenpox virus (varicella) and therefore is not given to people who are immunocompromised as there is a small risk they will become unwell after it.