Vaccination for Children

Vaccination not only protect your children from deadly diseases, such as polio, tetanus, diphtheria etc, but they also keep other children safe by eliminating or greatly decreasing dangerous disease that uses to spread from child to child.

Dtap (Diphtheria-Tetanus-Pertussis-Polio-Hib) 5 in 1

Give protection against diphtheriatetanuswhooping cough(pertussis), polio and Hib disease (Haemophilus influenzae type b), which are serious and sometimes fatal diseases.

Scheduled under Ministry of Health Malaysia

Hepatitis B

Hepatitis B is an infection of your liver. It can cause scarring of the organ, liver failure, and cancer. It can be fatal if it isn’t treated. It’s spread when people come in contact with the blood, open sores, or body fluids of someone who has the hepatitis B virus.

 Scheduled under Ministry of Health Malaysia.

Dtap (Diphtheria-Tetanus-Pertussis-Hib-Polio+Hepatitis B) 6 in 1

Both vaccines give protection against diphtheriatetanuswhooping cough(pertussis), polio and Hib disease (Haemophilus influenzae type b). The 6-in-1 vaccine also gives protection against hepatitis B, a cause of serious liver disease.

Scheduled under Ministry of Health Malaysia

Measles, Mumps and Rubella (MMR)

The MMR vaccine is a vaccine against measles, mumps and rubella. The first dose is generally given to the children around 9 to 15 months of age, with a second dose at 15 month to 6 years of age, with  at least 4 weeks between the doses.

Scheduled under Ministry of Health Malaysia.

Pneumococcal

Pneumococcal vaccines are vaccines against the bacterium Streptococcus pneumonia, meningitis, and sepsis.

Recommended for children as additional immunization.

 

Influenza

Influenza or flu is respiratory illness caused by a virus. Flu is highly contagious and is normally spread by the coughs and sneezes of an infected person.

Recommended for children as additional immunization.

 

Rotavirus

Rotavirus is a genius of double-stranded RNA viruses in the family Reoviridae. Rotavirus are the most common cause of diorrhoeal disease among infants and young children. 

For children below 6 months. Recommended for children as additional immunization.

Varicella Zoster

Varicella Zoster is one of eight herpesviruses known to infect humans. It causes chickenpox, a disease most commonly affecting children, teens and young adults, and shingles in adults; shingles is rare in children.

Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A is a vaccine-preventable, communicable disease of liver caused by the Hepatitis A virus (HAV). Transmitted person to person through the fecal-oral route or consumption of contaminated food or water.