Storing and transporting vaccines and medicines
Attention
- Vaccines must be stored and transported within the recommended temperature range of
+2°C to +8°C at all times — aim to store vaccines at +5°C
- Most vaccines are destroyed by freezing, and are sensitive to heat
- If not stored at correct temperature (cold chain breach) — vaccines will not work
as well and people may not be immunised
- Vaccines will arrive with a temperature monitoring device (eg TagAlert). Ensure you
know how to read it — contact pharmacy if instructions unclear
- Know what monitoring system to use when vaccines are used away from the clinic — (eg
coolers, ice packs, thermometers/data loggers)
- Clinics must have a written policy for vaccine management. Designate 1-2 people to
look after vaccines. Refer to the ‘Strive for 5’ national vaccine storage guidelines
— keep copies available
Vaccine Storage
Vaccine fridge
- Purpose built vaccine refrigerator plugged into back-up power supply, if available
- Label power supply 'DO NOT turn off power or disconnect this refrigerator'
- Clear (glass) door, clearly labelled shelves or baskets so you can see what’s inside
without opening door
- Warning sticker on glass door 'STOP Do not open door until you know which vaccines
you need and where they are located'
- Temperature probe on inside, temperature monitor on outside
- Monitors supplied with vaccines (if appropriate)
- Minimum of one heat and one freeze monitor on each shelf
- Vaccines stored away from sides, top and bottom to allow for circulation of air
- Stock rotated — new stock behind current stock
Remember:
- Vaccines used outside main clinic must be transported and monitored as per national
vaccines storage guidelines ('Strive for 5')
- Only vaccines, blood products or antivenoms are stored in vaccine fridge
- Do not store food or other goods in vaccine fridge
Cold Chain Breach
- Temperature monitoring device will indicate freezing or heat exposure
- Check highest and lowest fridge temperatures twice a day, before opening fridge for
first time and at end of the day — record on temperature graph chart
- If big variations from 2–8°C temperature range — find out why. May be the weather,
power supply, fridge, thermometer/monitor problem
- Adjust fridge settings slightly if you need to, but don't make sudden, drastic changes.
Fridge temperature controls can be tricky
- If vaccines are too warm or too cold when they arrive OR if recorded fridge temperatures are outside 2–8°C range (cold chain breach) — store where they will not be used, follow cold chain breach procedure AND talk with pharmacy or state vaccine centre to find out what to do with them
- Fix problems as soon as you can to stop loss of vaccines and possibility of giving
vaccines that won’t work
Power cuts
- Do not open fridge door
- If you know power is going off for more than a few hours
- Take vaccines out, close door quickly
- Surround or wrap vaccines loosely in insulating material (eg polystyrene chips, shredded
paper, bubble wrap, newspaper) put in esky
- Do not let bare ice bricks touch vaccines — may freeze
- Put esky back in fridge with ice bricks, keep door closed, keep heat and freeze sensitive
monitors with vaccines
Supporting resources