Type of vaccine
Single inactivated flu vaccine
Protects against
Flu
Primary course
1 dose
Boosters
None
Suitable for ages
From 9 months upwards
What is the flu vaccine?
Vaccinating against the flu poses a particular problem. The flu virus can mutate rapidly, meaning that different types of flu are likely to predominate every year.
A one-off vaccination can only protect against specific strains, so it is unable to offer long-term protection.
Every February, the World Health Organisation (WHO) predicts which flu strains are most likely to cause problems during the following winter. Most, but not all, governments follow the WHO’s advice when formulating their flu vaccines.
How does the flu vaccine work?
Each year, vaccines are made using the whole, or parts, of three killed flu viruses.
The flu vaccine is usually given to children as a nasal spray (i.e. sprayed into the nose) rather than as an injection. The nasal spray contains live forms of the flu virus that have been weakened (attenuated). This works by stimulating the immune system to recognise and fight against certain strains of flu without causing the flu in healthy people.
The nasal flu vaccine should not be given to children who are clinically immunosuppressed. For those children, an inactivated flu vaccine injection may be more suitable, which is what we offer at BabyJabs.
As flu vaccines are only designed to help protect against one season’s flu, yearly vaccinations are required to maintain protection. Natural protection to flu, after an attack, declines rapidly because the virus mutates.
People are most likely to catch flu between October and March.
Who should have the flu vaccine?
In 2013, the UK government announced that all children in England and Wales aged between two and 17 years of age were to be offered yearly flu vaccines. This is because children are known “super-spreaders” of viruses like the flu, so the aim is to vaccinate them to prevent them from passing the flu to more vulnerable members of society.
Flu vaccine frequently asked questions
Ingredients of the flu vaccine
Name: Quadrivalent Influenza Vaccine
Age: Suitable from 9 months onwards
Manufacturer: Sanofi Pasteur
Active ingredients: Influenza virus (inactivated, split) of the following strains: A/Victoria/4897/2022 (H1N1)pdm09-like strain (A/Victoria/4897/2022, IVR-238); A/Darwin/9/2021 (H3N2)-like strain (A/Darwin/9/2021, IVR-228); B/Austria/1359417/2021-like strain (B/Michigan/01/2021, wild type); B/Phuket/3073/2013-like strain (B/Phuket/3073/2013, wild type)
Other ingredients: A buffer solution containing sodium chloride, potassium chloride, disodium phosphate dihydrate, potassium dihydrogen phosphate, and water for injections. Some components such as eggs (ovalbumin, chicken proteins), neomycin, formaldehyde or octoxinol9 may be present in very small amounts
Mercury content: Nil
Aluminium content: Nil
Contains porcine gelatin?: No
Contains dairy products?: No
Licensed for use in the UK
Quadrivalent Influenza Vaccine patient information leaflet: Click to view
Aftercare
We’ll give you detailed aftercare advice for your child after their vaccination(s), including what to do in the event of any side effects.
Your child may experience some redness, tenderness and/or swelling at the injection site, so it’s helpful to expect this. These side effects should self-resolve within a few days.
You can download our Patient Aftercare leaflet here.
If your child is unwell outside of clinic hours, please call 111 for advice or go to A&E if they need urgent medical attention.