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Alice Shechin Yen, MD 

*Well Care and Vaccines

Healthy Kids, Healthy Futures:

Guides for parents about nutrition, development, safety, and other issues

Birth to 1 Week Checkup (usually a nurse visit)2 to 4 Week Checkup2 Month Checkup4 Month Checkup
6 Month Checkup9 to 10 Month Checkup12 Month Checkup
18 Month Checkup21 to 24 Month Checkup3 Year Checkup4 to 5 Year Checkup
5 to 6 Year Checkup6 to 8 Year Checkup8 to 10 Year Checkup10 to 12 Year Checkup

Tips for Teens

Questionnaires you can print out and bring to your well check visit:

2 to 4 Week Health Questionnaire2 Month Health Questionnaire4 Month Health Questionnaire6 Month Health Questionnaire
9 to 10 Month Health Questionnaire12 Month Health Questionnaire14 to 15 mo Health Questionnaire18 mo Health Questionnaire
21 to 24 mo Health Questionnaire3 year Health Questionnaire4 to 5 year Health Questionnaire5 to 6 year Health Questionnaire
6 to 8 year Health Questionnaire8 to 10 year Health Questionnaire10 to 12 year Health Questionnaire13 to 18 year Health Questionnaire
Parent of Teen Health QuestionnaireSports Check Health Questionnaire

Immunization Information

Shots to Protect Your Child/PHP InformationShots to Protect Your Child Immunization Information Packet - 28Pre-Vaccine Questionnaire
Vaccine Preventable DiseasesWho Needs Shots?Why it's Important to Immunize

Specific Vaccine Information

Tetanus and Diphtheria VaccinePolio VaccinePediarix Combo shotTdap booster for 11-12 yr olds
Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine Information SheetHepatitis B VaccineHepatitis A VaccineMeasles, Mumps & Rubella Vaccines
Meningococcal VaccineInactivated Influenza Vaccine What You Need to Know (2009-10)Varicella (Chicken Pox) VaccineHaemophilus Influenzae B Vaccine (HIB)
HPV shot for girlsRotavirus vaccine for infants

For travel shots, call your call center and request the Travel Nurse.

 


Disclaimer
If you think you have a MEDICAL OR PSYCHIATRIC EMERGENCY, CALL 911 IMMEDIATELY or go to the nearest hospital. DO NOT attempt to access emergency care through this web site. An emergency medical condition is a medical or psychiatric condition that manifests itself by acute symptoms of sufficient severity (including severe pain) such that you could reasonably expect the absence of immediate medical attention to result in any of the following: serious jeopardy to your health, serious impairment to your bodily functions, or serious dysfunction of any bodily organ or part. An emergency medical condition is also "active labor," which means a labor when there is inadequate time for safe transfer to a Plan hospital (or designated hospital) before delivery or if a transfer poses a threat to the health of the member or unborn child.

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