Sepsis and Prevention: Vaccinations

Infection prevention is the only way to prevent sepsis. Although not all infections are preventable, we can significantly reduce the risk through infection prevention measures such as regular hand washing and isolating ourselves if we are ill. Another important way to reduce the risk of contracting infections is by receiving vaccinations that target certain illnesses. These vaccines either kill or prevent microbes (germs) from reproducing, as with the chickenpox vaccine, or they minimize the impact of the illness, as do the vaccines for COVID-19.

Sepsis, which was often called blood poisoning, is the body’s life-threatening response to infection. Like strokes or heart attacks, sepsis is a medical emergency that requires rapid diagnosis and treatment. 

This resource was developed with funding from GSK’s COiMMUNITY grant initiative and executed independently without GSK oversight.

Suggested Citation:
Sepsis Alliance. Sepsis and Prevention:Vaccination. 2025.

Updated June 13, 2925.

More About Vaccines

Definition and types of vaccines

Vaccines are medications that stimulate your immune system into producing antibodies against specific germs.

There are different types of vaccines, which trick your body into thinking it was infected with this germ before.

The vaccines most people are familiar with are made with weakened or dead organisms of a particular virus. These organisms can’t make you sick, but they imitate the viral infection, causing your body to think it’s developed the illness. Your immune system responds to the vaccine by producing t-lymphocytes (also called t-cells) and antibodies. The t-cells circulate in your blood system looking for abnormalities or infections. The t-cells then “recruit” the antibody-producing lymphocytes and plasma cells.

Once your immune system detects the organism, it makes antibodies to destroy the “invaders.” This leaves your body with a memory of how to fight off that particular illness should you encounter it again. These vaccines are available by injection, by mouth, or by nasal spray, depending on the vaccine.

Inactivated vaccines

Inactivated vaccines are those made with dead germs. The most commonly given vaccines using an inactivated microbe are for preventing:

  • Hepatitis A
  • Influenza (injection only, not the nasal formulation)
  • Polio (injection only, not the oral formulation)

Live-attenuated vaccines

More vaccines are made with weakened forms of the microbes. Attenuated means weakened. The most commonly used live attenuated vaccines include:

  • MMR (for measles, mumps, and rubella)
  • Rotavirus
  • Smallpox
  • Chickenpox
  • Yellow fever

mRNA vaccines

mRNA vaccines, also called messenger RNA vaccines, entered the public vocabulary as the COVID-19 pandemic raged on. mRNA technology is not new though. Researchers had been working for decades to find vaccines and treatments using mRNA technology, but up to now hadn’t found a good, effective use for it.

Unlike traditional vaccines, mRNA vaccines don’t have any virus form in them. Instead, the vaccine uses genetically engineered mRNA to instruct the body how to produce copies of a protein found on the outside of the virus. Once it’s done its job, the mRNA breaks down. It doesn’t enter the DNA, nor does it alter DNA in the body. It also doesn’t prevent someone from contracting the infection. Instead, the vaccines reduce the risk of severe illness and death.

Conjugate vaccines

Other vaccines, called subunit, polysaccharide, recombinant, and conjugate vaccines are made with parts of microbes, depending on the infection. The most common ones include vaccines against:

  • Shingles (herpes zoster)
  • Whooping cough
  • Hepatitis B
  • Hib (Haemophilus influenza type b) disease
  • Pneumococcal disease
  • Meningococcal disease

Toxoid vaccines

Toxoid vaccines are what the name implies: they contain a toxin or chemical made by bacteria or a virus. The vaccines provide immunity to the harmful effects of the infection, instead of to the infection itself. Vaccines for tetanus and diphtheria are toxoid vaccines.

Viral vector vaccines

The Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine, which is no longer available in the U.S., used viral vector technology. This technology has been around for a few decades, like mRNA. It involves using a modified version of a separate but similar virus to send messages to the body about how to fight the infection. With the COVID-19 vaccine, the virus vector was an adenovirus, one of the viruses that cause the common cold.

How they work

Vaccines take time to work

It can take anywhere from several days to a few weeks for a vaccination to become effective. For example, if you receive chickenpox vaccine and you spend time with someone who has the disease within a few days of the injection, you may still become ill. When this happens, some people believe that the vaccination made them sick, but this isn’t so. They were exposed to the virus before their immune system had a chance to react to the vaccine.

Why vaccinations instead of natural immunity?

When you contract a virus, such as a meningitis or measles virus, your body tries to fight it. If it’s successful and the illness goes away, you usually develop an immunity to the disease and you shouldn’t get it again. Or if you do get the illness, it may be milder than it would have been ordinarily. This is a natural immunity. However, these illnesses are serious and can cause long-lasting damage to your body, and even sepsis and death. Vaccinations significantly reduce the damage many common viruses and some bacteria can cause. For example, in the early 1900s, an average of 503,282 people died of measles each year in the U.S. Because of vaccinations against the illness, in 1990, only 89 people in the U.S. died from measles.

Keeping vaccines up to date

You may recall you or your child getting some vaccines in a series. These vaccines need more than one dose for your immune system to recognize and build up antibodies against some viruses. Other vaccines need a booster shot years later because immunity wears off. Therefore, it’s important to follow vaccine and booster schedules, even for adults. The newest shingles vaccine requires two injections within two to six months of each other.

Recommended vaccinations

Recommended vaccines

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) maintains a recommended vaccine schedule for you and your family. You can also review the World Health Organization (WHO) and the European Center for Disease Prevention (ECDP) recommendations as well. Following the recommended schedules gives your children the best chances at reducing their risk of developing these largely preventable illnesses and associated complications that could occur.

Adults who haven’t received the recommended vaccines as children can still receive vaccinations against the diseases. Other recommended vaccines include those that prevent pneumonia, shingles, influenza, and COVID-19.

Extra vaccinations

If you travel to other countries or work in a field that could expose you to certain illnesses, you may be required to receive additional vaccines. Before your travels, check with the CDC and your doctor to see which vaccines are recommended and which are mandatory. It takes several weeks for some vaccines to be fully effective, so leave yourself enough time before your departure date. Some countries will deny entry to people who have not received mandatory vaccinations, particularly if you are going to specific locations, such as the jungle or farmlands.

Exceptions to vaccinations

Not everyone can receive vaccines. People with a weakened immune system might have to delay or not receive vaccinations at all. Some are allergic to an ingredient in a particular vaccine. The people around them can provide herd immunity through their own vaccinations.  If the people who are regularly in contact with the unvaccinated person are vaccinated, the unvaccinated person has a lower chance of being exposed to the virus or bacteria and becoming ill.

If you suspect sepsis, call 9-1-1 or go to a hospital and tell your medical professional, “I AM CONCERNED ABOUT SEPSIS.” 

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Jean Perley

So this happened to me. Right before Christmas I had a lot of lower abdominal pain and felt like I had to pee constantly. I went to the Urgent Care near me because it was a weekend. They assumed it was a UTI and called in a prescription for an antibiotic which I took until it was gone. About 3 weeks later I started having the same sensation so I went to my primary doctor. She sent off a urine sample and called in a prescription for antibiotics. (Sepsis and Urinary Tract Infections) My pharmacy failed to deliver my medication ... Read Full Story

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Tracy Wilson

My mother was diagnosed with staph infection in her heart due to a lead on her defibrillator. (Sepsis and Invasive Device) In Nov. 2024 she had the device removed the beginning of Dec 2024. From there she developed gram pos cocci in clusters, later down the line candidemia and a few others. My mother passed away Jan 2025. I wrote my first book about the last 3 months of her life living with staphylococcus. It can be found on Amazon.com – The S Effect. I hope to bring awareness or light to the deadly infection because enough has not been ... Read Full Story

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Linda Jones

My mom , Linda Marie Jones, passed away suddenly and unexpectedly from septic shock on Sunday, June 23, 2024. She went to two hospitals between June 19th-June 21st for back pain, and was misdiagnosed at both. The first hospital she went to on Wednesday (June 19th) released her early Thursday morning, despite her urine showing a possible UTI, pending cultures. (Sepsis and Urinary Tract Infections) She should not have been released. Those doctors should have done a further workup and put 2 and 2 together and realized something was more critical than just general back pain, giving her symptoms, age, ... Read Full Story

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Kimberley Sidhu

In May 2024, I gave birth while unknowingly battling invasive group A strep (Sepsis and Group A Streptococcus) —a life-threatening infection that went undiagnosed. The signs of maternal sepsis (Sepsis and Pregnancy & Childbirth) were there, but they were dismissed, and my husband and I were never taught what to watch for. I was lucky enough to get to the hospital to be seen and I was placed in ICU and needed emergency life saving surgery. I was in critical condition, fighting for my life.  It was only after surgery, I began to realize my condition was severe, and there was a lack of awareness ... Read Full Story

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Kathleen C.

In April 2024 went into severe septic shock from bowel rupture. (Sepsis and Perforated Bowel) Was on ventilator for 8 days, went into liver failure, heart failure, Afib, and renal failure requiring dialysis. I then develop PRES syndrome and lost my vision. Was in hospital for 7 weeks. All organs have returned to normal and my vision is back. I currently have post sepsis syndrome but blessed to have made it through such a critical health crisis. Read Full Story

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Related Resources

Information Guide

Prevention: Vaccinations

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