A Worry Over Mandatory Vaccines
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www.voanews.com/english/2004-11-06-voa3.cfm
Voice of America
Some in US Worry Over Mandatory Vaccines
By Maura Jane Farrelly
New York
6 November 2004
There's been a lot of talk in the American media lately about the influenza
vaccine shortage. It was touched off when British health officials suspended
Chiron Corporation's license to manufacture the vaccine, cutting America's
expected supply in half. The shortage is a serious problem, particularly for
the elderly and for people with chronic respiratory problems. But the fact
is, the flu vaccine isn't mandatory in the United States, which sets it
apart from the 12 different vaccines American children are required by law
to receive by the age of five. It's been more than 60 years since U.S.
health officials started mandating childhood vaccines. But the issue is far
from settled.
It's a fairly common sound at doctor's offices across the country, where
every day, children receive dozens of shots that they're required to have
before they can attend school in the United States. Back in 1940, health
officials started mandating that children receive 3 doses of a Diphtheria
and Whooping Cough vaccine before the age of five. Today, American children
receive about 40 doses of vaccines designed to prevent 12 different
diseases, among them, Measles, Tetanus, and Hepatitis B.
At this New York City doctor's office, Sean Reilly's 15-month-old daughter,
Emma, just received her inoculations against Polio and Pneumonia. "It went
really well. She's very good at getting her shots. Actually, she got three
today. The first one she didn't make a peep, and then the other two they
said stung, so those bothered her a little bit. But she's brave," he says.
Thanks to mandatory vaccination, diseases that used to be common killers in
the United States have become mere blips on the epidemiological radar.
Diphtheria, for instance, killed nearly 176,000 Americans from 1920 to 1922.
That's the year the vaccine against the disease was first licensed. In 2001,
though roughly 60 years after the Diphtheria vaccine became mandatory, just
two people in the United States died from the disease. On the surface, it
seems like a no-brainer: Mandatory Vaccination is a good thing.
Except that while child mortality has decreased dramatically over the course
of the last few decades, the number of children suffering from diagnosed
learning disabilities, diabetes, asthma, and autism has gone up.
"We have almost 20 percent of our children now in this country chronically
ill or disabled. That's a very different situation from what it was 20 or 30
years ago, and there's no explanation given by the public health authorities
as to why that is true," says Barbara Loe Fisher, president of the National
Vaccine Information Center. The group was founded in 1982 by parents whose
children were injured or even killed by the vaccine against Whooping Cough.
Several studies have noted that a small minority of children suffer severe
brain damage after receiving the vaccine, though the exact connection is
unclear.
In 1986, the U.S. Congress passed the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act,
which established a compensation fund. and requires doctors to inform
parents about the benefits and risks of vaccination. But even after they've
been informed, parents don't really have the option of refusing to have
their children inoculated. Seventeen states do permit religious or
ideological exemptions, but Barbara Loe Fisher says those are hard to get,
and there's a movement to eliminate them all together. "I think that
ideologically, certainly, the public health authorities are committed to the
mass-use of vaccines to prevent all infectious diseases. And I think one of
the most important areas of scientific research that needs to be done is to
investigate why some children don't seem to be able to handle the process of
vaccination, and instead of becoming healthier, they become sicker," she
says.
But the number of children injured each year by mandatory vaccinations is
very small in some cases, less than one tenth of one percent. And doctors
with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American Academy
of Pediatrics all insist that mandatory vaccination is the best way to
prevent the kind of child mortality rates that used to devastate this
country and continue to devastate countries where vaccination isn't
pervasive.
Daniel Neuspiel is a pediatrician who's written articles for parents
concerned about vaccination. "The one disease that in my professional
lifetime has been almost eradicated has been Haemophilus Influenze B. The
H-Influenza-B vaccine was licensed in 1985, and prior to that, I commonly
saw children with meningitis and other serious infections from that disease
hospitalized or even dying from it. And I haven't seen a case of it in
years," he says.
That's wonderful, says Barbara Loe Fisher, of the National Vaccine
Information Center. But she says the fact remains that public health
officials are still mandating a policy they know can hurt people. And she
says there's very little interest in understanding why children like her
son, who has suffered multiple learning disabilities as a result of a
vaccine he received in 1980, just can't handle being vaccinated. I think you
look at the history of medicine, and whenever you take a 'one size fits all'
approach, it usually fails," she says. "Why would it not be failing in terms
of vaccination?"
Right now, there are only four companies that manufacture the 12 vaccines
required in the United States. Last year, the National Vaccine Advisory
Committee, which is part of the CDC, reported shortages in the supply of
eight out of the 12 mandatory vaccines. But this year, supply does not seem
to be a problem.
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