Why We Vaccinate: Meningococcal Disease

May. 262026

If you are still hesitant about vaccinating your children, I understand. We are constantly bombarded with bad information from previously reliable sources. And we need to understand the logic behind the science as well. When confronted with a choice between accepting or rejecting vaccination, there is a risk in either choice. What you need to understand is that the risk of not vaccinating is always greater. If that statement were not true, the vaccine would not be offered. I have seen vaccines withdrawn or not offered to the general public because of the possibility that giving the vaccine was riskier than not getting the vaccine.

So you can believe that the meningococcal vaccines are a good idea even though the diseases themselves are not common. Invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) is caused by a bacterium called Neisseria meningiditis. It can cause meningitis (inflammation around the brain and spinal cord) or septicemia (blood infection). IMD progresses rapidly and can be fatal. People can carry the bacteria without symptoms and spread the bacteria through close contact. The peak age for carrying the bacteria asymptomatically is adolescence and young adulthood, as is the peak age for becoming infected. Common symptoms include fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, stiff neck, severe headache, sensitivity to light, and a purple rash that doesn’t blanch. Complications even if treatment is started immediately can include hearing loss, brain damage, limb loss, and death within 24 hours of the onset of symptoms. College students and armed services inductees, especially in their first year in a dorm or barracks, are at three-fold increased risk. But all adolescents can reduce risk with safe and effective vaccines. There are five different strains of Neisseria meningitidis bacteria, and the risk is mostly based on age. Here is a typical vaccine schedule which I recommend:

Age 11-12: 1 dose of Men ACWY vaccine
Age 16: Booster – second dose of Men ACWY vaccine
Age 16 –23: 1 dose of Men B vaccine

Note that the most common strain in older adolescents is type B. The vaccine for type B is not covered by insurance or VFC after age 19.
Please talk to your pediatrician. Make sure your adolescents are protected.

Meet the Author: Dr. Robert Golenbock
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Center for Pediatric Medicine is here for your pediatric needs 24.7, 365 days a year! We understand that your child may get sick outside of CPM’s normal office hours.

How does after-hours work:

  • Monday – Thursday: our offices will close at 9:00 pm. We then re-open at 8:30 am Friday.
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You can call any of our office locations or 203-790-0822. You will be promoted with an after-hours message. If you select option 1 you will be connected with CPM’S after-hours answering service team. The after-hours team will gather all of your child’s information (Patient's first and last name, best contact number, and health care concern). This message will be sent to “Rainbow Babies” an experienced triage service that CPM uses to assist us with clinical after-hours calls. A trained triage nurse will call the patient back and provide the recommended clinical advice. If the triage nurse needs more assistance they will reach out to one of CPM’s on-call providers for the night. CPM’s on-call provider will call the patient directly and continue to evaluate your child over the phone. All phone call encounters are followed up with a call the next day from CPM’s triage department.

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