Contact your local health unit for advice before you move.
You will have a choice to either get the dose for your daughter before moving, or to take a copy of your daughter’s immunization record with you to your new home area. Keep the record in a safe place and share it with public health in your new area to determine when to give your daughter her remaining doses of HPV and other vaccines.
Regardless of how long it has been since the last dose of HPV vaccine, these girls are encouraged to get protection against HPV disease as soon as possible.
Girls who didn’t finish their shots for HPV in grade 6 or 9 can contact their local health unit or talk to their school nurse, who will determine the correct schedule to complete their vaccinations.
Fact: The HPV vaccine has proven safe and effective in protecting young women from cervical cancer – the second most common form of cancer in women age 20-44.
Fact: HPV vaccine has been very carefully and thoroughly studied — more, in fact, than many other vaccines.
Fact: The goal is to protect girls before they are sexually active.
Fact: There were several studies in this age group. And they showed very good immune response, with the girls making high levels of antibodies against HPV.
Fact: Researchers have good reason to predict that HPV vaccine protection will last for at least 15 years, and probably all life long.
Fact: Pap tests are an extremely important part of fighting cervical cancer. But the HPV vaccine helps prevent it in the first place — and helps many women avoid further uncomfortable tests and uncertainty.
Fact: Sexually active women of all ages will still need to get Pap tests after they’ve been vaccinated.
Fact: An HPV vaccine program is worth the investment, recouping its costs in savings on testing and treatment for the cancers it prevents.
Fact: The evidence suggests that being vaccinated against HPV will have no impact on the age people become sexually active.
Fact: There is no evidence to link HPV vaccine to serious events.
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