Langthorne Sharma

Family Practice

  • Clinics & Services
    • Our Clinics
    • Appointments with the Doctors
    • Repeat Prescription Requests
    • Electronic Prescription Service
    • House Calls
    • Results of Tests
    • Vaccination Information
    • Travel Clinic
    • Out of Hours Emergency
    • Referrals
    • Sickness Certificates
    • Non NHS Services
  • The Practice
    • Registering with the Practice
    • Our Staff
    • Entitlement to NHS Treatment
    • Patient Participation Group (PPG)
    • Practice Policies
      • Accessibility
      • Choose if data from your health records is shared for research and planning
      • Cookie Policy
      • Confidentiality
      • Patient’s Complaint Procedure
      • Patient Rights and Responsibilities
      • Privacy Policy
      • The National Care Record Service (NCRS)
      • Violent and Abusive Patients
      • Your Health Records
      • Website Terms and Conditions
  • Contact
    • Contact Telephone Numbers
    • Location
    • Send a Message
  • Patient Access
    • Repeat Prescription Request
    • Appointments Online
    • Cancel an Appointment
    • Friends & Family Test
    • Update your Personal Details Forms
      • Change of Contact Details Form
      • National Data Opt-out
      • Register as a Carer Form
      • Register for Online Services Form
      • Communication Consent Form
    • Health Review Forms
      • Alcohol Consumption Review Form
      • Asthma Review Form
      • Blood Pressure Review Form
      • Breathlessness Review Form
      • Epilepsy Review Form
      • Male Urinary Tract (IPSS) Review Form
      • Mental Health Review (PHQ-9) Form
      • Smoking Review Form
      • Travel Risk Assessment Form
    • Health A-Z
  • News
  • Home

23rd August 2024

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a common cause of coughs and colds. It usually gets better by itself, but it can be serious for some babies and older adults.

Who’s at risk from RSV

RSV is very common. Almost all children get it at least once before they’re 2 years old.

It’s not usually serious, but some babies and adults have a higher risk of getting seriously ill, particularly:

— babies under 6 months old
— children who were born prematurely
— adults over 75 years
— babies, children and older adults with a weakened immune system, or long-term lung or heart conditions

In babies, RSV is a common cause of a type of chest infection called bronchiolitis. This can cause breathing problems and may need to be treated in hospital.

RSV can also cause a serious lung infection (pneumonia) in babies and older adults.

RSV vaccination from September 2024

A vaccine to help protect against RSV will be available on the NHS from 1 September 2024.

You’ll be able to get the vaccine if:

— you’re aged 75 to 79
— you’re 28 weeks pregnant or more – this will help protect your baby for the first few months after they’re born

If you’re aged 75 to 79, your GP surgery will contact you about getting vaccinated. Please wait to be contacted.

From September, you can speak to your maternity service or GP surgery about getting your RSV vaccination if you’re 28 weeks pregnant or more.

Get more information on respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)

Article by / Uncategorised

Contact us online

Call 111 when it's less than 999

Langthorne Sharma Family Practice
Langthorne Health Centre
13 Langthorne Rd
Leytonstone
E11 4HX

Telephone: 0208 539 6676

  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Accessibility
  • Violent and Abusive Patients

Designed by GenPra | Websites for GP Practices.

Administrator Log in