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PE18.1-14 | Immunization — Assignment
CLINICAL SCENARIO
You will assess a 14-month-old child with incomplete immunization history, identify gaps against the National Immunization Schedule of India, plan a catch-up schedule, counsel a hesitant parent, and reflect on cold chain and AEFI documentation principles. This assignment develops the integrative competencies required of a paediatric intern in any Indian government or private facility.
Instructions
- Read the case scenario carefully.
- Complete each section in order — do not skip sections.
- Base your immunization schedule recommendations on the National Immunization Schedule (NIS) of India 2023, not the IAP private schedule.
- Support your counselling strategy with at least two specific factual points about vaccine-preventable disease burden in India.
- For the AEFI section, use WHO 2013 AEFI classification categories.
- Submit as a structured written report (not bullet points in section 4 onwards).
Case Scenario:
Ravi, a 14-month-old boy from a rural village in Tamil Nadu, is brought to the PHC by his grandmother. His Mother and Child Protection (MCP) card shows: BCG given at birth; OPV-0 given at birth; Pentavalent-1 and OPV-1 given at 8 weeks; no further immunizations documented. The grandmother says the mother 'was afraid of fever and stopped coming.' Ravi is well-nourished, afebrile, and clinically well.
Length: 1000–1400 words (excluding tables and counselling note)
What to Submit
Section 1: Current Immunization Status Assessment
Guidance: List all vaccines Ravi has received (with dates/ages from the MCP card). Then list all vaccines that are overdue at 14 months according to the NIS. Organize into a table with columns: Vaccine, NIS Due Age, Status (Given / Overdue), Comments.
Section 2: Catch-Up Schedule Plan
Guidance: Design a catch-up schedule for Ravi starting today. Use the NIS catch-up principles: (a) do not repeat doses already received; (b) use the minimum intervals between doses; (c) do not give more than 4 injectable vaccines in one visit (explain your prioritization). State which vaccines can be given today, and which are scheduled for future visits with the minimum interval. Include Hepatitis B status — if birth Hep B was given as part of pentavalent-1, address this correctly.
Section 3: Cold Chain Considerations
Guidance: The health worker opens the ILR and notices the thermometer reads +9°C. Describe: (a) which vaccines could be affected; (b) how you would assess the OPV vials (VVM stage); (c) how you would assess the pentavalent vials (shake test procedure and interpretation); (d) the action you would take for each category of affected and unaffected vaccines before proceeding.
Section 4: Parent Counselling
Guidance: Write a counselling note as you would deliver it to the grandmother (acting as proxy parent). Cover: (a) why the missed vaccines matter — mention at least two specific diseases with their burden in India (measles, polio, diphtheria, pertussis, Hib, or rotavirus); (b) the concept of herd immunity and why community coverage matters; (c) expected side effects of vaccines to be given today and how to manage them at home; (d) AEFI warning signs that require immediate return to the PHC.
Section 5: AEFI Documentation
Guidance: After Ravi receives his vaccines, he develops a temperature of 39.2°C and local redness at the injection site 12 hours later. (a) Classify this AEFI using WHO 2013 categories; (b) Describe what you would document in the AEFI register (minimum 6 data points); (c) State whether this requires reporting to the district AEFI committee and give your reason; (d) Write the advice you would give the mother.
Section 6: Reflection
Guidance: In 150–200 words, reflect on: (a) barriers to immunization completion in rural India; (b) one strategy that has evidence for improving immunization coverage; (c) the medicolegal significance of maintaining an accurate immunization record.
Grading Rubric — Immunization Case Assignment Rubric
| Criterion | Points | Full-marks descriptor |
|---|---|---|
| Accuracy of immunization status assessment and catch-up schedule (adherence to NIS 2023 doses, ages, intervals) | 20 pts | All overdue vaccines correctly identified; catch-up schedule with correct minimum intervals; all 4 sections of the schedule (today, 4 weeks, 9 months correction, boosters) complete and NIS-consistent. |
| Cold chain knowledge: correct VVM assessment, shake test for freeze-sensitive vaccines, and appropriate action | 15 pts | Correctly distinguishes freeze-tolerant vs freeze-sensitive vaccines; accurate shake test procedure; appropriate quarantine/discard/use decision for all categories; ILR temperature breach response complete. |
| Quality of parent counselling: disease burden facts, side effect management, herd immunity, AEFI warning signs | 20 pts | Counselling note addresses all 4 required elements; ≥2 specific disease burden statistics cited (e.g., India-specific measles/polio/Hib data); herd immunity explained at parent level; AEFI warning signs complete and actionable. |
| AEFI classification, documentation, and reporting decision accuracy | 15 pts | Correct WHO 2013 AEFI category (vaccine product-related reaction); ≥6 data points in AEFI register; correct reporting decision (non-serious → not required to escalate) with clear justification; appropriate home advice. |
| Reflection: barriers, evidence-based strategy, medicolegal insight — depth and specificity | 10 pts | Identifies ≥2 specific, context-relevant barriers; names an evidence-based strategy (e.g., home visits, mHealth reminders, incentives); articulates medicolegal significance of records with reference to liability or legal proceedings. |
PEER REVIEW
Your peer reviewer should check: (1) Are the NIS doses and catch-up intervals factually correct? Look up the NIS 2023 schedule if needed. (2) Is the cold chain section clinically accurate — are shake test and VVM applied to the right vaccines? (3) Would the counselling note reassure a hesitant grandmother while being medically truthful? (4) Is the AEFI classification using WHO 2013 categories? Provide 2–3 specific, constructive comments. Do not just say 'good work' or 'needs improvement' — cite specific errors or omissions with the correct information.