Why Combination Vaccines Are Safe and Important for Kids

Vaccines protect children from serious infectious diseases that can cause widespread illness and even death. As more vaccines have been added to the recommended childhood schedule, many parents understandably have questions about how and when these vaccines are given. One common topic is combination vaccines which protect against more than one disease in a single shot. In this blog, we cover what they are, why they’re used, and why separating vaccines into individual shots isn’t recommended.

What Are Combination Vaccines?
Combination vaccines are multiple vaccines given at the same time through one injection. Instead of receiving several separate shots spaced out over weeks or months, children receive immunizations that have been combined into one or a few products. For example, a single shot might protect against diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (whooping cough), often referred to as DTaP, instead of three separate injections. This approach has become a standard and evidence-based practice in pediatric care.

 Why Use Combination Vaccines?

There are several strong reasons why combination vaccines are part of routine immunization schedules. Below is a list of them.

  1. Fewer Needle Sticks Means Less Stress

Children typically do not enjoy shots, and multiple injections at different times can be stressful for both kids and families. Combination vaccines reduce the number of injections needed, which means fewer moments of discomfort and anxiety during doctor visits. Health professionals know that helping children have more positive experiences with healthcare helps build trust and cooperation over time.

  1. Protection Sooner and with Fewer Visits

Combination vaccines allow children to be protected against multiple diseases without waiting for many separate appointments. Delaying vaccines to separate them out means delaying protection. Each vaccine is scheduled at a time when it’s most effective for your child’s immune system. Giving all recommended vaccines on schedule, including combination vaccines, helps ensure your child develops immunity at the right time and doesn’t go without protection longer than necessary. 

  1. Strong Evidence of Safety and Effectiveness

 Some parents worry that giving multiple vaccines at once might overwhelm a child’s immune system. Research shows that children’s immune systems are naturally equipped to handle exposure to many germs at once. Every day, kids encounter thousands of different bacteria and viruses in their environment. The antigens in combination vaccines represent a tiny fraction of what a child’s immune system processes naturally. Extensive studies confirm that combination vaccines are safe and effective at helping children build immunity to multiple diseases simultaneously.

  1. Reducing Missed Opportunities for Immunization

Every healthcare visit is a chance to protect a child. When multiple vaccines are offered together, it decreases the risk that a child will miss a recommended vaccine. Offering vaccines in combination helps ensure children are fully immunized on time, to help them avoid catching or spreading preventable illnesses. 

What About Separating Vaccines?
Some parents wonder if separating vaccines could reduce side effects or be gentler on a child’s immune system. However, there is no scientific evidence that spacing out vaccines protects children better or reduces risk. In fact, delaying vaccines can have downsides such as increasing time without protection against serious diseases, more pediatric visits and needle sticks which can be stressful and disruptive, and higher likelihood of missing recommended vaccines completely due to schedule changes or life events. The recommended vaccine schedule, including the use of combination vaccines, is carefully designed by experts who evaluate safety, effectiveness, and the best timing for developing immunity. Following this schedule offers the strongest protection for your child with the fewest unnecessary delays. 

What About Side Effects?
Like all vaccines, combination vaccines can have side effects, most of which are mild and temporary, such as soreness at the injection site, fussiness, or a low-grade fever. These are normal signs that the immune system is responding to the vaccine. Serious side effects are rare, and healthcare providers are trained to recognize and respond to them if they occur.

Trusting the Science
The safety and scheduling of vaccines, including combination vaccines, are based on decades of careful research, monitoring, and review by scientists, pediatricians, and public health experts. Children’s immune systems are remarkably capable of responding to multiple immunizations at once, and giving combination vaccines delivers powerful protection with fewer injections.

If you have questions about how combination vaccines work or want to understand the timing of your child’s immunizations, your pediatrician is always your best resource. We’re here to provide evidence-based answers and to support your family as you make decisions that protect your child’s health.

Vaccines, Autism & the CDC Update: What Parents Should Know

As your child’s medical home, we want to address a recent update on the CDC’s website openly, clearly, and compassionately.

First and most importantly:

Nothing has changed in our medical guidance, our vaccine policies, or our confidence in the safety of routine childhood immunizations.

Like the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), Peninsula Pediatrics stands firmly on decades of evidence-based research. The science continues to be clear: vaccines do not cause autism. This conclusion has been supported by numerous large studies involving hundreds of thousands of children, and it has been reaffirmed by major medical and public health organizations across the world.

The AAP responded promptly to the CDC update, reiterating the strength of the existing evidence. You can read their full statement here.

We know how unsettling it can feel when conflicting or confusing information circulates online—especially when it involves your children. Our goal is to provide clarity and reassurance amid the noise. At Peninsula Pediatrics:

  • We follow the evidence.
  • We support the full routine vaccine schedule.
  • We continue to trust the extensive research demonstrating the safety and effectiveness of childhood immunizations.

 

Vaccines protect not only individual children, but also our entire community, especially those who are too young or unable to be vaccinated. This is a responsibility we take seriously.

If you have questions, concerns, or simply want to talk through what you’ve seen, please reach out. We are here for thoughtful, honest, and judgment-free conversations.

Thank you for trusting us with your children’s care.

We remain as committed as ever to providing guidance rooted in science, compassion, and the well-being of every family we serve.

Peninsula Pediatrics

Why Vaccines Matter

As parents and caregivers, we want to keep our children healthy and safe from illnesses, especially life-threatening ones. Although there’s been a lot of recent noise about vaccine safety, medical science and pediatric experts remain clear that vaccination is safe and the most effective way to protect kids from serious illnesses. Extensive studies on vaccines and their potential risks find that recommended vaccines are safe for children and adolescents and are not associated with diabetes, infertility, autism, or any other developmental delay. Large-scale studies conducted in multiple countries over many years have found no credible link between life-saving childhood vaccines and autism. The original study that claimed a connection was retracted due to faulty data. 

Scientific evidence also shows that vaccines do not cause Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). While many vaccines are given at ages when SIDS risk is naturally higher, research confirms there is no causal relationship. In fact, some data suggest vaccines may even help reduce the risk of SIDS. Every vaccine undergoes strict testing before it’s offered to children. After approval, it continues to be monitored closely for safety through systems like the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS). This ongoing surveillance helps catch rare side effects and ensures ongoing confidence in vaccine safety. It’s also important to remember that mild side effects, such as a sore arm or low-grade fever, are normal signs that the body is building protection. More serious adverse events are extremely rare, and pediatricians are trained to respond quickly if they occur.

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) encourages following the recommended immunization schedule for children, which is based on the most recent scientific data. Starting with newborns, it’s recommended to give your infant their first dose of the hepatitis B vaccine before leaving the hospital, to protect against a virus that can lead to serious liver disease. Over their first six months, your baby will begin receiving additional vaccines, often around the 2-month checkup, including vaccines for rotavirus, DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis), Hib (Haemophilus influenzae type b), polio (IPV), and pneumococcal disease. These early doses are critical because they protect infants during a time when their immune systems are still catching up. During this same window, babies can also receive medication to prevent respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), a leading cause of hospitalization in infants. Parents who are pregnant during RSV season may receive a vaccine to help protect their baby after birth. 

Starting at 6 months, it is recommended that children get the annual flu vaccine, which is recommended for everyone over 6 months old. Even healthy kids can develop complications from influenza, and yearly vaccination helps reduce severe illness. The COVID-19 vaccine is also recommended for children beginning at 6 months, as young children are at higher risk of hospitalization from COVID. Both vaccines are safe and effective, and they can often be given at the same visit as other scheduled vaccinations. 

As your child reaches 12 to 15 months, it is recommended that they receive vaccines to protect them from MMR (measles, mumps, rubella), varicella (chickenpox), and hepatitis A and get booster doses of earlier vaccines. These prevent illnesses that can cause serious complications, from pneumonia and brain swelling to liver disease. Before starting school, children should receive boosters for DTaP, polio, MMR, and varicella to keep their immunity strong. By this age, your child’s immune system has learned to fight off up to 16 preventable diseases, thanks to the vaccines they’ve received since birth. Staying on schedule not only protects your child but also helps prevent outbreaks in schools and communities.

Parents often wonder why vaccines are timed so specifically. The answer is that years of research show vaccines work best at certain ages and intervals. Following the schedule helps your child’s body build lasting protection during the periods when they are most at risk. Pediatricians keep careful track of each vaccine and can help you catch up if your child ever falls behind.

Hearing conflicting opinions about vaccines can be confusing. But your pediatrician is here to provide guidance and can talk you through the risks and benefits and help you make informed decisions that fit your family’s needs. If your child is behind on immunizations or if you have any questions about vaccines, please call our office.