If you've ever sat looking at the CDC pediatric vaccination schedule, you know โ it's a wall of color-coded rectangles, abbreviations, and footnotes that seems specifically designed to break your spirit. Memorizing it cold feels impossible.
The good news: the FNP exam does not test the full schedule. It tests about 10 to 15 high-yield concepts. Learn those and you'll get most vaccine questions right.
Vaccines on the boards are about timing and contraindications. Master those two and the rest is detail.
The Birth-to-Six Vaccines
Memorize the rough age, not the exact dates:
- Birth: Hepatitis B (first dose)
- 2 months: DTaP, Hib, IPV, PCV13, Rotavirus, Hep B (#2)
- 4 months: DTaP, Hib, IPV, PCV13, Rotavirus
- 6 months: DTaP, Hib, IPV, PCV13, Rotavirus, Hep B (#3 between 6โ18 months), Influenza (annually starting now)
- 12โ15 months: MMR, Varicella, Hib (final), PCV13 (final)
- 15โ18 months: DTaP (#4)
- 4โ6 years: DTaP (#5), IPV (#4), MMR (#2), Varicella (#2)
The Adolescent Block
- 11โ12 years: Tdap, HPV (starting at 9 acceptable; 2-dose if started under 15, 3-dose if 15+), Meningococcal ACWY (booster at 16)
- 16 years: Meningococcal ACWY booster, Meningococcal B can be given
Live Vaccines
Memorize these โ they have special rules:
- MMR
- Varicella
- Rotavirus
- Live attenuated influenza (FluMist)
- Yellow fever
- BCG
Live vaccines are contraindicated in:
- Pregnancy
- Severe immunocompromise (high-dose steroids, biologics, recent chemo, untreated HIV with low CD4)
- Anaphylaxis to a vaccine component
Test Pearl: MMR and varicella are the most-tested live vaccines. Don't give them in pregnancy or severe immunocompromise. After MMR, avoid pregnancy for 4 weeks.
What's NOT a Contraindication
The exam loves these distractors. None of the following are contraindications to vaccination:
- Mild illness (cold, low-grade fever)
- Current antibiotic use
- Breastfeeding
- Prematurity (vaccinate on chronological age, normal doses)
- Family history of seizures
- Family history of SIDS
HPV โ A High-Yield Topic
- Routine starting at age 11โ12, can give as early as 9.
- 2-dose series if started before age 15 (0 and 6โ12 months).
- 3-dose series if started at 15 or older (0, 1โ2, 6 months).
- Catch-up available through age 26, with shared decision-making to 45.
Influenza
- Annually for everyone 6 months and older.
- First time receiving flu vaccine and under 9 years โ 2 doses, 4 weeks apart.
- Egg allergy is rarely a contraindication anymore; only severe anaphylaxis warrants special handling.
Hep A vs. Hep B
- Hep A: 2 doses starting at 12 months, 6 months apart.
- Hep B: 3-dose series; first at birth, then 1โ2 months and 6โ18 months.
Meningococcal Vaccines
- MenACWY: Routine at 11โ12, booster at 16.
- MenB: Shared decision-making age 16โ23 (preferred 16โ18).
- Both are required for college students living in dorms (varies by state).
Catch-up Vaccination
The exam may give you a child who is behind. Rules of thumb:
- Vaccines started but interrupted don't need to be restarted โ pick up where you left off.
- Minimum intervals between doses must be respected.
- Use the CDC catch-up schedule for specifics, but principles matter more than memorizing every interval.
Special Populations
- Pregnant: Tdap each pregnancy (27โ36 weeks), influenza, COVID. No live vaccines.
- Asplenic patients: PCV13 + PPSV23, MenACWY, MenB, Hib.
- Travelers: hepatitis A, typhoid, yellow fever, meningococcal as indicated.
How to Drill
Don't try to memorize the chart cold. Make a simple table: age column, vaccine column. Fill in from memory three days in a row. Then practice questions. The pattern locks in.
The schedule is intimidating. The exam questions are not.