Injections are given for treatment while vaccines are given to produce antbodies to protect the recipients from specific diseases
five
They are called Interjections...but 10 are...Ouch!Oh NO!Wonderful!Hey!Eew!Hooray!Yay!NO!That's Exciting!Yikes!
It depends on which vaccine you are receiving.
5
No, the only forms of the vaccine are for use as IM (intramuscular) injections or as intra-nasal mists.
CPT Code 90472- Immunization administration (includes percutaneous, intradermal, subcutaneous, or intramuscular injections); 1 vaccine (single or combination vaccine/toxoid) each additional vaccine
Anyone can give their own injections if they know how. If not your vet will have to do it. With the exception of the rabies vaccine. In some states it is illegal for anyone but a vet to administer the rabies vaccine.
You cannot take the nasal spray simultaneously, but you can take the injections at the same time. The nasal spray should be 6 weeks apart. The injections can be done together or at any interval. It doesn't matter which is first.
The HPV vaccine is most effective when a patient gets the full series of three injections. You may get partial protection if you don't complete the series.
Tetanus vaccine is part of the triple injection given to infants. That is very rare to get allergic reaction in infants. Some times the anxious mother gives multiple injections of tetanus vaccine to her child. Such child may get rash after the tetanus injections. This happens due to condition called as hyperimmunoglobulinemia. This is more frequent than you can imagine in developing countries.
Vaccine administration codes. Not the charge for the vaccine itself (that is usually a separate charge), but the charge for injecting the shot.
interval- flu vaccine and the shingles vaccine