Publications by authors named "Sophie Chien-Hui Wen"

Aims: Children with severe needle phobia find vaccination extremely distressing and can remain unvaccinated, which puts them at an increased risk of contracting and transmitting vaccine preventable disease. Referral to a specialist or hospital service may occur when they cannot be safely vaccinated in the community, but engagement of allied health services can be inconsistent. The aim of the study was to assess the impact of a multidisciplinary, consumer-oriented model of care on vaccinations for needle phobic children.

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Biologic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (bDMARDS) are increasingly used in clinical practice for a variety of conditions. Due to concerns surrounding persistence of drug levels and resulting immunosuppression, current case reports recommend against live vaccine administration in the first year of life for an infant exposed to perinatal bDMARDS. As a result, this significantly impacts receipt of rotavirus vaccination, a vaccine recommended in many countries' national immunization program.

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Aim: Varicella is a vaccine-preventable disease not notifiable in New Zealand (NZ), and varicella vaccine is not funded in the National Immunisation Schedule (NIS). Hospitalisations can occur because of bacterial secondary infection and other complications, which can result in long-term sequelae. Varicella may not be acknowledged in discharge coding when complications occur weeks after infection.

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Aims: Varicella is now a vaccine-preventable disease but is generally considered benign, making it a low priority for a funded universal immunisation scheme. We aimed to increase the knowledge of the severity, morbidity and mortality caused by varicella, by a review of cases requiring paediatric intensive care in New Zealand where vaccine is available but not funded.

Methods: This is a retrospective chart review of children admitted to the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) over a 10-year period (July 2001-July 2011) identified from the PICU database with a primary or secondary code for varicella.

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