Saturday, September 15, 2012
Immunizations
A very good friend of mine has three little girls that have never received vaccinations so I asked him about his decision not to immunize. He stated that he doesn’t feel it’s necessary to risk his daughters’ health by giving them vaccines. He believes that too many parents are over-medicating their children and doesn’t want his children exposed to diseases they probably would not naturally come in contact with. As he lives in the United States, this statement is probably true. Many of the diseases we are immunizing against are pretty much eradicated in the U.S. However, with intercontinental travel and commerce, they could still be exposed.
Many parts of the world are still fighting against these diseases. For example, Polio has had major breakouts in Tajikistan, Brazil and Angola in the past two years. Measles have broken out in Tanzania and Sierra Leone. In these outbreak areas, vaccinations are the best option for most of the population to control the diseases.
Back to my friend in the United States, I agree with him that his children may be better off not being immunized. Did you know that The National Childhood Vaccine Injury Compensation Program has paid out over $1.5 billion dollars in damages to families for injuries and deaths following a vaccine reaction? Or that every year the Food and Drug Administration receives 12,000-14,000 reports to the Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS) of hospitalizations, injuries and deaths following vaccination? With so many reactions to vaccines, particular individuals may be saving their lives by not getting immunized. Sometimes the vaccine can even cause the disease it’s supposed to be protecting against. The live polio vaccine causes approximately 10-20 cases of polio each year. Other times the vaccine is ineffective. I personally know two young ladies who received the HPV vaccine and still ended up contracting it. It definitely makes you re-think vaccines.
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It is good to see both sides of the vaccine argument. As for myself, I have chosen to get vaccines, as did my parents before I was old enough to choose. For your example of your two friends who got the HPV vaccine, how do you know they did not have it prior to being vaccinated? Men are the carriers of HPV virus.
ReplyDeleteAs for children, many get the chicken pox vaccine, and although they can still get the chicken pox, it is usually much much less intense than it could have been. It is hard to study the positive effects of vaccines because you cannot easily track what people are exposed to, yet did not catch because of the vaccine.
Lauren,
DeleteAs far as the two young ladies with HPV, I don't know that they were tested for HPV before they got the vaccine but one of them had never had sex until after she had the vaccine so she either got it from the vaccine or it did not protect her from a male carrier.