Vaccines & Preventable Diseases
Find it by Vaccine or by Vaccine-Preventable Disease:
Cervical Cancer
Diphtheria
Hepatitis A
Hepatitis B
Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib)
Human Papillomavirus (HPV)
H1N1 Flu (Swine Flu)
Influenza (Seasonal Flu)
Japanese Encephalitis (JE)
On This Page:
Vaccine-preventable disease levels are at or near record lows. Even though most infants and toddlers have received all recommended vaccines by age 2, many under-immunized children remain, leaving the potential for outbreaks of disease. Many adolescents and adults are under-immunized as well, missing opportunities to protect themselves against diseases such as Hepatitis B, influenza, and pneumococcal disease. CDC works closely with public health agencies and private partners to improve and sustain immunization coverage and to monitor the safety of vaccines so that this public health success story can be maintained and expanded in the century to come.
Vaccine Shortages & Delays
The latest national information about vaccine supplies and guidance for healthcare providers who are facing vaccine shortages or delays
Potential New Vaccines
Resources for finding information on potential vaccines, research and development status, licensure status, etc.
- New Vaccine Surveillance Network
Program evaluates impact of new vaccines and vaccine policies through a network of 6 US sites - Status of Licensure and Recs for New Vaccines
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) - Potential New Vaccines
Immunization Action Coalition (IAC)
Vaccines: The Basics
Without vaccines, epidemics of many preventable diseases could return, resulting in increased – and unnecessary – illness, disability, and death.
Images and logos on this website which are trademarked/copyrighted or used with permission of the trademark/copyright or logo holder are not in the public domain. These images and logos have been licensed for or used with permission in the materials provided on this website. The materials in the form presented on this website may be used without seeking further permission. Any other use of trademarked/copyrighted images or logos requires permission from the trademark/copyright holder
This symbol means you are leaving the CDC.gov Web site. For more information, please see CDC's Exit Notification and Disclaimer policy.
File Formats: All viewers, players, and plug-ins used on this site can be downloaded from the file formats page. (For example: Adobe Acrobat Reader for pdf files, Windows Media Player for audio and video files, PowerPoint Viewer for presentation slides, etc.)
Content last reviewed on May 10, 2009
Content Source: National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases