Did you now that August Is National Immunization Month?

By Fire Chief Sam DiGiovanna

Health authorities and vaccine developers are currently partnering to support the technology needed to produce a Covid-19 vaccine. With hope they can find something soon! But we still have other vaccinations to deal with and August is National Immunization Month.

Wouldn’t it be nice if you could immune yourself from traffic? How about those rude or obnoxious people? How about the complainers in your organization? Wouldn’t it be nice if we could “vaccinate” ourselves against specific things or people? Unfortunately, these toxic people and situations are the association dues we must pay for being alive.

Although vaccinating ourselves against the less-pleasant people in life is beyond the realm of modern medical science, what our current vaccines can do is still pretty powerful.

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But here’s the thing about vaccination success: It can lead to complacency. Recently, we’ve seen outbreaks of measles and many experts believe that these spikes are caused by parents refusing to vaccinate their children. When this happens it can threaten the health of the unvaccinated child and other children in the community.

That’s why we can’t let our guard down, and why the Center for Disease Control recognizes August as National Immunization Month.

Just In Time Before School Resumes…

Reach out to the schools in your community to ensure children are up to date on vaccines as they head back to school. School-age children, from preschoolers to college students, need vaccines. Shots may hurt a little, but the diseases they can prevent are a lot worse.

Immunization is not just for children either…

Those over 60 should receive the shingles vaccine. Those over 65, as well as those with certain medical conditions, should get the pneumonia (PCV13) vaccine. And everyone who is healthy enough should receive an annual flu vaccine!

Washing Your Hands… The best “do it yourself vaccination” against germs!

Finally, remember that hand-washing is like a “do-it-yourself” vaccine. It involves five simple and effective steps — wet, lather, scrub, rinse, dry — to keep you healthy. Regular hand-washing, particularly before and after certain calls or activities, is one of the best ways to remove germs, avoid getting sick and prevent the spread of germs to others.

Now if we could just make a soap that could wash away annoying people…!