SVMC Flu Clinics Now Open
Prepare for flu season: Get vaccinated, get protected
Everyone six months and older should get an influenza (flu) vaccination each year. Getting the flu shot helps protect you, your family and your community.
Southwestern Vermont Medical Center (SVMC) welcomes the community to our upcoming flu vaccination clinics at ExpressCare and encourages patients of our practices to make an appointment during a scheduled clinic.
To find the nearest flu clinic, visit SVMC’s Flu Vaccine website
If you are not a patient at one of the cited practices, you can still get flu shots on a walk-in basis at ExpressCare on the SVMC campus. In addition, your local pharmacy may also provide flu vaccines.
For additional information, please refer to the CDC for more flu resources.
Flu myth quiz
Are you flu savvy? Take this quiz and see how well you can tell flu fact from flu myth.
True or False: You can't get the flu from the flu vaccine.
True: The flu vaccine contains dead or inactivated flu virus, and cannot cause infection, so it is impossible to get the flu from the vaccine. The vaccine works to prepare your body to fight off infection from the live virus. A person may get a fever and body aches after getting the flu vaccine, but this is most likely the immune system reacting to the vaccine or an unrelated viral infection.
True or False: The flu vaccine significantly reduces your risk of getting the flu and passing it on to your family and friends.
True: Flu viruses change every year. The flu vaccine is updated to include current viruses from year to year. So get the flu vaccine every year to protect yourself and your friends and family.
True or False: The flu vaccine is safe for pregnant women, seniors and children over six months of age.
True: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends the flu vaccine for everyone older than six months of age. The only reason not to get the vaccine is if you have had a severe reaction to the flu vaccine in the past.
1744