RxNorm 798440
Haemophilus b (meningococcal protein conjugate) and hepatitis B vaccine (Hib-HepB) 0.5 mL
RxNorm Semantic Concepts
RxNorm semantic concepts for the RxCUI 798440 unique identifier include: Haemophilus b (meningococcal protein conjugate) and hepatitis B vaccine (Hib-HepB) 0.5 mL Injection (11836532), Haemophilus influenzae type b conjugate (meningococcal protein conjugate) 7.5 MCG vaccine / hepatitis B surface antigen recombinant vaccine 5 MCG per 0.5 ML Injection (11836533) and 0.5 ML Haemophilus influenzae b (Ross strain) capsular polysaccharide meningococcal protein conjugate vaccine 0.265 MG/ML / hepatitis B surface antigen vaccine 0.01 MG/ML Injection (12333451).
RxNorm Atom ID: 11836532 - Prescribable Name
Haemophilus b (meningococcal protein conjugate) and hepatitis B vaccine (Hib-HepB) 0.5 mL Injection
- RXCUI:
- 798440 - RxNorm Unique Identifier for a concept (Concept ID)
- LAT:
- ENG - Language of the Term
- RXAUI:
- 11836532 - Unique identifier for the atom (RxNorm Atom ID)
- Is Prescribable?
- NO - This drug IS NOT part of the RxNorm Current Prescribable Content, a subset of RxNorm that includes all drugs available for prescription in the United States.
- Concept Description:
- Haemophilus b (meningococcal protein conjugate) and hepatitis B vaccine (Hib-HepB) 0.5 mL Injection - Description of concept identifier
- Term Type (TTY):
- PSN - Term type in source with name and description
- Term Type Name:
- Prescribable Name - Name of term type in source
- Term Type Description:
- Synonym of another TTY, given for clarity and for display purposes in electronic prescribing applications. Only one PSN per concept. - Description of term type in source
- Code:
- 798440 - "Most useful" source asserted identifier. If the source vocabulary has more than one identifier, or a RxNorm-generated source entry identifier. (if the source vocabulary has none.)
- Suppress Flag:
- O
Suppressible flag. Values = N, O, Y, or E. N - not suppressible. O - Specific individual names (atoms) set as Obsolete because the name is no longer provided by the original source. Y - Suppressed by RxNorm editor. E - unquantified, non-prescribable drug with related quantified, prescribable drugs. NLM strongly recommends that users not alter editor-assigned suppressibility. - CVF:
- - Content view flag. RxNorm includes one value, '4096', to denote inclusion in the Current Prescribable Content subset. All rows with CVF='4096' can be found in the subset.
- Source:
- RXNORM - Concept source abbreviation
- Source Name:
- RxNorm Vocabulary - The official name for a source
- Source Version:
- 20AA_240401F - The source version
- Source Date:
- April 01, 2024 - RxNorm data last updated
- Source License Contact:
- RxNorm Customer Service
U.S. National Library of Medicine
8600 Rockville Pike
Bethesda
MD
United States
20894
(888) FIND-NLM
[email protected]
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/umls/rxnorm/ - The source license contact information - Source Content Contact:
- RxNorm Customer Service
U.S. National Library of Medicine
8600 Rockville Pike
Bethesda
MD
United States
20894
(888) FIND-NLM
[email protected]
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/umls/rxnorm/ - The source content contact information - Source Short Name:
- RxNorm work done by the National Library of Medicine - The short name of a source as used by the NLM Knowledge Source Server
RxNorm Atom ID: 11836533 - Synonym
Haemophilus influenzae type b conjugate (meningococcal protein conjugate) 7.5 MCG vaccine / hepatitis B surface antigen recombinant vaccine 5 MCG per 0.5 ML Injection
- RXCUI:
- 798440 - RxNorm Unique Identifier for a concept (Concept ID)
- LAT:
- ENG - Language of the Term
- RXAUI:
- 11836533 - Unique identifier for the atom (RxNorm Atom ID)
- Is Prescribable?
- NO - This drug IS NOT part of the RxNorm Current Prescribable Content, a subset of RxNorm that includes all drugs available for prescription in the United States.
- Concept Description:
- Haemophilus influenzae type b conjugate (meningococcal protein conjugate) 7.5 MCG vaccine / hepatitis B surface antigen recombinant vaccine 5 MCG per 0.5 ML Injection - Description of concept identifier
- Term Type (TTY):
- SY - Term type in source with name and description
- Term Type Name:
- Synonym - Name of term type in source
- Term Type Description:
- Synonym of another TTY, given for clarity. - Description of term type in source
- Code:
- 798440 - "Most useful" source asserted identifier. If the source vocabulary has more than one identifier, or a RxNorm-generated source entry identifier. (if the source vocabulary has none.)
- Suppress Flag:
- O
Suppressible flag. Values = N, O, Y, or E. N - not suppressible. O - Specific individual names (atoms) set as Obsolete because the name is no longer provided by the original source. Y - Suppressed by RxNorm editor. E - unquantified, non-prescribable drug with related quantified, prescribable drugs. NLM strongly recommends that users not alter editor-assigned suppressibility. - CVF:
- - Content view flag. RxNorm includes one value, '4096', to denote inclusion in the Current Prescribable Content subset. All rows with CVF='4096' can be found in the subset.
- Source:
- RXNORM - Concept source abbreviation
- Source Name:
- RxNorm Vocabulary - The official name for a source
- Source Version:
- 20AA_240401F - The source version
- Source Date:
- April 01, 2024 - RxNorm data last updated
- Source License Contact:
- RxNorm Customer Service
U.S. National Library of Medicine
8600 Rockville Pike
Bethesda
MD
United States
20894
(888) FIND-NLM
[email protected]
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/umls/rxnorm/ - The source license contact information - Source Content Contact:
- RxNorm Customer Service
U.S. National Library of Medicine
8600 Rockville Pike
Bethesda
MD
United States
20894
(888) FIND-NLM
[email protected]
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/umls/rxnorm/ - The source content contact information - Source Short Name:
- RxNorm work done by the National Library of Medicine - The short name of a source as used by the NLM Knowledge Source Server
RxNorm Atom ID: 12333451 - Semantic Clinical Drug
0.5 ML Haemophilus influenzae b (Ross strain) capsular polysaccharide meningococcal protein conjugate vaccine 0.265 MG/ML / hepatitis B surface antigen vaccine 0.01 MG/ML Injection
- RXCUI:
- 798440 - RxNorm Unique Identifier for a concept (Concept ID)
- LAT:
- ENG - Language of the Term
- RXAUI:
- 12333451 - Unique identifier for the atom (RxNorm Atom ID)
- Is Prescribable?
- NO - This drug IS NOT part of the RxNorm Current Prescribable Content, a subset of RxNorm that includes all drugs available for prescription in the United States.
- Concept Description:
- 0.5 ML Haemophilus influenzae b (Ross strain) capsular polysaccharide meningococcal protein conjugate vaccine 0.265 MG/ML / hepatitis B surface antigen vaccine 0.01 MG/ML Injection - Description of concept identifier
- Term Type (TTY):
- SCD - Term type in source with name and description
- Term Type Name:
- Semantic Clinical Drug - Name of term type in source
- Term Type Description:
- Ingredient + Strength + Dose Form - Description of term type in source
- Code:
- 798440 - "Most useful" source asserted identifier. If the source vocabulary has more than one identifier, or a RxNorm-generated source entry identifier. (if the source vocabulary has none.)
- Suppress Flag:
- O
Suppressible flag. Values = N, O, Y, or E. N - not suppressible. O - Specific individual names (atoms) set as Obsolete because the name is no longer provided by the original source. Y - Suppressed by RxNorm editor. E - unquantified, non-prescribable drug with related quantified, prescribable drugs. NLM strongly recommends that users not alter editor-assigned suppressibility. - CVF:
- - Content view flag. RxNorm includes one value, '4096', to denote inclusion in the Current Prescribable Content subset. All rows with CVF='4096' can be found in the subset.
- Source:
- RXNORM - Concept source abbreviation
- Source Name:
- RxNorm Vocabulary - The official name for a source
- Source Version:
- 20AA_240401F - The source version
- Source Date:
- April 01, 2024 - RxNorm data last updated
- Source License Contact:
- RxNorm Customer Service
U.S. National Library of Medicine
8600 Rockville Pike
Bethesda
MD
United States
20894
(888) FIND-NLM
[email protected]
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/umls/rxnorm/ - The source license contact information - Source Content Contact:
- RxNorm Customer Service
U.S. National Library of Medicine
8600 Rockville Pike
Bethesda
MD
United States
20894
(888) FIND-NLM
[email protected]
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/umls/rxnorm/ - The source content contact information - Source Short Name:
- RxNorm work done by the National Library of Medicine - The short name of a source as used by the NLM Knowledge Source Server
RxNorm Atom 12333451 Attributes
Property | Value | Explanation |
---|---|---|
RXN AI | {798438} 797752 | RXCUI of BOSS Active Ingredient preceded by RXCUI of SCDC responsible for value |
RXN AI | {798445} 798444 | RXCUI of BOSS Active Ingredient preceded by RXCUI of SCDC responsible for value |
RXN AM | {798438} 797752 | RXCUI of BOSS Active Moiety preceded by RXCUI of SCDC responsible for value |
RXN AM | {798445} 798444 | RXCUI of BOSS Active Moiety preceded by RXCUI of SCDC responsible for value |
RXN BOSS FROM | {798438} AI | Source of BOSS as either from the active ingredient (AI) or the active moiety (AM) preceded by RXCUI of SCDC responsible for value |
RXN BOSS FROM | {798445} AI | Source of BOSS as either from the active ingredient (AI) or the active moiety (AM) preceded by RXCUI of SCDC responsible for value |
RXN OBSOLETED | 04/25/2023 | Date the RxNorm atom became obsolete |
RXN QUANTITY | 0.5 ML | Normal Form quantity factor |
* This product uses publicly available data courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine (NLM), National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services; NLM is not responsible for the product and does not endorse or recommend this or any other product.
Patient Education
Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) Vaccine
Why get vaccinated? Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) disease is a serious disease caused by bacteria. It usually affects children under 5 years old. It can also affect adults with certain medical conditions. Your child can get Hib disease by being around other children or adults who may have the bacteria and not know it. The germs spread from person to person. If the germs stay in the child's nose and throat, the child probably will not get sick. But sometimes the germs spread into the lungs or the bloodstream, and then Hib can cause serious problems. This is called invasive Hib disease. Before Hib vaccine, Hib disease was the leading cause of bacterial meningitis among children under 5 years old in the United States. Meningitis is an infection of the lining of the brain and spinal cord. It can lead to brain damage and deafness. Hib disease can also cause: pneumonia severe swelling in the throat, making it hard to breathe infections of the blood, joints, bones, and covering of the heart death Before Hib vaccine, about 20,000 children in the United States under 5 years old got Hib disease each year, and about 3 to 6% of them died. Hib vaccine can prevent Hib disease. Since use of Hib vaccine began, the number of cases of invasive Hib disease has decreased by more than 99%. Many more children would get Hib disease if we stopped vaccinating.
[Learn More]
Hepatitis B Vaccine
Why get vaccinated against hepatitis B? Hepatitis B is a serious infection that affects the liver. It is caused by the hepatitis B virus. Hepatitis B can cause mild illness lasting a few weeks, or it can lead to a serious, lifelong illness. Hepatitis B virus infection can be either acute or chronic. Acute hepatitis B virus infection is a short-term illness that occurs within the first 6 months after someone is exposed to the hepatitis B virus. This can lead to: fever, fatigue, loss of appetite, nausea, and/or vomiting jaundice (yellow skin or eyes, dark urine, clay-colored bowel movements) pain in muscles, joints, and stomach Chronic hepatitis B virus infection is a long-term illness that occurs when the hepatitis B virus remains in a person's body. Most people who go on to develop chronic hepatitis B do not have symptoms, but it is still very serious and can lead to: liver damage (cirrhosis) liver cancer death Chronically infected people can spread hepatitis B virus to others, even if they do not feel or look sick themselves. Up to 1.4 million people in the United States may have chronic hepatitis B infection. About 90% of infants who get hepatitis B become chronically infected, and about 1 out of 4 of them dies. Hepatitis B is spread when blood, semen, or other body fluid infected with the hepatitis B virus enters the body of a person who is not infected. People can become infected with the virus through: birth (a baby whose mother is infected can be infected at or after birth) sharing items such as razors or toothbrushes with an infected person contact with the blood or open sores of an infected person sex with an infected partner sharing needles, syringes, or other drug-injection equipment exposure to blood from needlesticks or other sharp instruments Each year about 2,000 people in the United States die from hepatitis B–related liver disease. Hepatitis B vaccine can prevent hepatitis B and its consequences, including liver cancer and cirrhosis.
[Learn More]
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