Health: Stiko recommends meningococcal B vaccination for infants

Health
Stiko recommends meningococcal B vaccination for infants

A pediatrician vaccinates a child: Infants should receive a meningococcal B vaccination immediately. photo

© Julian Stratenschulte/dpa

Meningococcal B diseases have decreased significantly in Germany in recent years. However, in the event of an illness, the course is usually unpleasant. Early vaccination can help.

The Standing Vaccination Commission (Stiko) now recommends vaccination against for infants from the age of two months Meningococcal B (MenB). “Overall, invasive MenB diseases occur very rarely, but the course of the disease is very serious,” said the experts. The risk of illness is highest in the first year of life. That’s why early vaccination is important.

To protect against serious illness, the recommendation is that infants should receive three doses of vaccine at the ages of two, four and twelve months. For small children, the recommendation published by the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) calls for a catch-up vaccination up to their fifth birthday.

Signs of meningococcal infection

Meningococci are bacteria and are transmitted to other people through droplets, such as when coughing or sneezing. A distinction is made between so-called serogroups. According to the RKI, most diseases in Germany are caused by serotypes B, C, W and Y.

For serogroup C, Stiko has been recommending vaccination for children from the age of two since 2006. A vaccination recommendation against type B has so far only applied to certain risk groups, people at risk at work and people who travel to a highly endemic area.

According to the RKI, a meningococcal infection often results in headaches, fever, chills and dizziness with a “severe feeling of illness”. The experts say about infants and children: “Fever, vomiting, irritability or even drowsiness, cramps, crying out and a bulging or hard fontanel can occur.”

How likely is a meningococcal infection?

Overall, invasive meningococcal B diseases are very rare in Germany and have declined significantly over the past two decades. According to the RKI, around 3.5 out of 100,000 infants fell ill each year in the five years before the corona pandemic.

According to experts, the general mortality rate from MenB disease in Germany is around 8 percent. From 2015 to 2019, a total of 59 deaths were reported in Germany. “Most deaths occurred in infants and young children.”

dpa

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