Influenza vaccination is not recommended for the following seven categories of people, regardless of whether they have epilepsy or not: 1. people who are allergic to eggs or other components of the vaccine; 2. infants younger than 6 months of age; 3. patients in acute exacerbation of chronic diseases; patients with acute infectious diseases; 4. patients with mental illness, severe epilepsy and schizophrenia; 5. pregnant women in the first three months of pregnancy; 6. people with fever or cold. In general pediatric epilepsy patients can be vaccinated on time. However, if infants have frequent seizures or progressive encephalopathy of unknown origin, the vaccination should be postponed; pediatric epilepsy patients over 7 years of age should not receive additional pertussis vaccine if their epilepsy is not controlled; pediatric epilepsy patients with immunodeficiency diseases should not receive attenuated vaccine; pediatric epilepsy patients should not receive a booster vaccination if they have convulsions within 3 days after the first injection; if encephalopathy appears within 7 days after the first injection, they should not receive a second vaccination. The second vaccination should also not be given if encephalopathy appears within 7 days after the first injection. From experience, vaccines related to neurological diseases may theoretically aggravate seizures or even cause seizures, such as B encephalitis vaccine, rheumatoid vaccine, and diphtheria vaccine (mainly tetanus vaccine). Other commonly used vaccines have not been shown to be associated with seizures and can be administered. Of course, some uncomfortable symptoms such as fever may occur after vaccination and may aggravate seizures in people with epilepsy, which is a result of fever and has nothing to do with the type of vaccine.