Vaccination Recommendations During Pregnancy

Gebelik Sırasında Aşılama ÖnerileriMeasles Not applicable in pregnancy
Rubella Not administered in pregnancy. When applied to a non-pregnant woman, it is recommended not to become pregnant for 3 months.
Mumps: Not applicable in pregnancy.
Poliomyelitis (Polio): The oral vaccine is a live attenuated vaccine. The injection vaccine is an inactivated virus vaccine with increased efficacy. It is not recommended in pregnancy except for those at high risk of exposure. Those at high risk of exposure are administered two doses of boosted inactivated virus vaccine at 4-8 week intervals. The 3rd dose is administered 6-12 months after the 2nd dose. However, in case of an outbreak, one dose of oral live polio vaccine is administered.

Yellow Fever Single subcutaneous dose when traveling to high-risk areas.
Varicella (chicken pox): Not administered in pregnancy. Varicella immunoglobulin is administered to newborns or women who develop varicella 4 days before or 2 days after birth.
Influenza (flu): Administered to all pregnant women regardless of trimester during the flu season (October-May). It is administered intramuscularly in a single dose every year. It is an inactivated virus vaccine.
Rabies (Rabies): Dead virus vaccine. Can be administered during pregnancy. Each case is evaluated individually.
HPV: Not administered during pregnancy. If started before pregnancy, it is stopped during pregnancy. After birth, the series is administered from the beginning. It is a series of 3 doses at 0,2,6 months.
Hepatitis B: It can be administered in women at risk of infection. 3 doses are administered intramuscularly at 0,1 and 6 months. Newborns are vaccinated as soon as they are born. In cases where the mother is a carrier, immunoglobulin is also administered to the newborn.
Hepatitis A: It is administered during international travel to the risk area. Two doses at 6-month intervals, administered intramuscularly. inactivated virus vaccine.
Pneumococcal: Indications in the normal population are the same in pregnancy. It is recommended for immunocompromised women who do not have a spleen, who have kidney, heart or lung disease, or who smoke.
Meningococcus: Indications do not change with pregnancy, recommended in outbreaks.
Typhoid fever: Not recommended except for those with close and continuous exposure and those traveling to high-risk areas
Tetanus vaccine In our country, 2 doses in the form of Td are recommended during pregnancy. In developed countries, a single dose is administered between 27-36 weeks of gestation with the addition of acellular pertussis vaccine. This vaccine in the form of Tdap also protects the baby from pertussis in early infancy.

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