| Literature DB >> 35494972 |
Raed Al-Dahash1,2,3, Abdallah Kamal4, Ashraf Amir5, Ashraf Shabaan6, Diaa Ewias7, Hussam Jnaid8, Mussa Almalki9, Nabil Najjar10, Najlaa Deegy11, Saaed Khedr12, Samia Bukhary13.
Abstract
Pneumonia is the most frequent cause of hospitalization, resulting in a high risk of mortality. Diabetic patients are at high risk of aquatinting pneumococcal infections with their consequent complications. Despite the fact that glycemic control of the patients reduces the risk of diabetic complications and enhances their immunity, pneumococcal vaccination should still be given irrespective of the patients' glycemic control. The purpose of this review is to address the present situation of pneumococcal disease prevention in diabetic patients in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and to gather professional recommendations to overcome the vaccination-related barriers. Onsite insights of scientific leaders in family medicine, endocrinology, and internal medicine in Riyadh and Jeddah were gathered and linked with the available literature to tackle the current practice of pneumococcal disease prevention in diabetic patients in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Pneumococcal vaccination importance is still not well recognized among endocrinologists across the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, despite the availability of established local recommendations and the National Immunization Program. The prevention of serious and fatal pneumococcal diseases should be one of the treatment pillars for diabetic patients, and it is not less important than controlling other risk factors.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes; local vaccination guidelines; pneumococcal vaccine; pneumonia; types 2 diabetes
Year: 2022 PMID: 35494972 PMCID: PMC9048768 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.23612
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Professional recommendations for the management of the vaccination patients-related barriers
HCPs: health care professionals
| Barrier | Recommendations |
| 1. Lack of knowledge | Raising the public and HCPs awareness |
| 2. Unavailability of the vaccine in some clinics | Providing vaccines |
| 3. Fear of potential side effects of the vaccine | Correcting misbeliefs by offering appropriate patient education |
| 4. Unwillingness of the patients to receive vaccination | Educating patients about the safety and protective effects of vaccines, and educating patients about the mortality risk of the disease |
Vaccine accessibility barriers
| Leading accessibility barriers | Suggested recommendations |
| Institution’s infrastructure | Build a room facilitated for the vaccination procedures |
| Increase human resources | |
| Provide vaccines in all centers | |
| Inclusion procedure | Formulate clearly stated and well-established regulations |
| Decrease the restriction of vaccination to only some of the populations | |
| Establish pathways to include vaccination as a part of diabetes management | |
| Authorize physicians to order the vaccine | |
| Medical facilities regulations | Provide vaccines |
| Launch small campaigns specified to each institution to increase awareness | |
| Shorten the vaccination processes held by the vaccination committee | |
| Insurance policies | Expand the coverage by insurance to all patients |
The Saudi Thoracic Society Pneumococcal Vaccination Guidelines 2016
*In case of CSF leak and cochlear implant give PCV13 followed by one dose of PPSV23 ≥8 weeks later [21].
**In case of CSF leak and cochlear implant give a single dose of PCV13 first, followed ≥8 weeks later by a dose of PPSV23. CSF: cerebrospinal fluid; PCV13: 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine; PPSV23: 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine.
| Recommended pneumococcal vaccination for high-risk individuals aged >6 years and <50 years | Conditions | Not previously vaccinated | Already received PPSV23 only |
| High-risk immunocompetent (patients who have the ability to produce a normal immune response) [ | Administer one dose of PPSV23* | No need to repeat unless age is >50 years** | |
| Immunocompromised (patients who have a weakened immune system) [ | Give a single PCV13 dose first, followed ≥8 weeks later by a dose of PPSV23. Revaccination with PPSV23 every 5 years. | Give single PCV13 dose first, followed ≥8 weeks later by a dose of PPSV23 (at least 5 years from last PPSV23 dose). Revaccination with PPSV23 every 5 years. | |
| Functional and anatomical asplenia |