For Adults Age 19 and Older

All adults need immunizations to protect their health. This page provides immunization information and resources for both adults and health care providers.

Adults

For Health Care Providers

  • Standards for Adult Immunization Practice – Use these four national standards to increase vaccination coverage rates among adult patients in your clinic. You can also check out the Adult Immunization Standards webpage from the CDC.
  • The Importance of Adult Immunizations (PDF) and Spanish (PDF) – This educational manual provides information for health promoters and community health workers to educate in groups or individually. It focuses on the importance of adult immunizations and the diseases they prevent. It's colorful and easy to understand! You can print it and use it as a flipbook.
  • Respiratory Immunization Data – The Washington State Department of Health (DOH) publishes weekly updates to its dashboard that displays the number of flu, COVID-19 and RSV vaccines that are administered in Washington, as well as estimates of the percentage of Washingtonians who are immunized. You can also view other immunization data from DOH.
  • Adult Vaccinations: Team-Based Immunization (American Medical Association) – Earn CME 0.5 credits with this online training module that will help you improve adult vaccination rates in your practice. You can implement an adult immunization program in your practice by following just six STEPS.
  • Vaccinating Adults: A Step-by-Step Guide (Immunize.org) – This guide describes how to implement adult vaccination services in your healthcare setting. It provides a review for staff who already vaccinate adults; the Guide available for free download.
  • Health Care Personnel Vaccination Recommendations (Immunize.org) – Health care providers have an important role in reducing the spread of disease. They should set an example by getting the recommended vaccines to protect themselves, their staff, and their patients.
  • Recommended Vaccines for Health Care Workers (PDF) – You are a trusted member of the community. You have a professional and ethical responsibility to prevent the spread of infectious diseases to the people you serve.