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MEDIA REPORTS ASK
THE QUESTION:
IS THE CURE WORSE
THAN THE DISEASE?
In fall 1997, two influential
professional magazines featured articles asking the question: Has
the decrease of infectious diseases in childhood through the mass
use of vaccines been replaced with an increase in chronic diseases
such as diabetes and asthma? The Economist, a prestigious
international magazine read by world leaders in government, business
and public policy, and Science News, a magazine read by both
health care professionals and the general public, explored the
reported links between vaccines and chronic diseases in their
November 22, 1997 issues.
Infections in Childhood Protect
Against Chronic Disease - In an article entitled "Plaqued by
Cures," The Economist acknowledged that trying to prevent or
treat an infectious disease can have profound effects on the
pathogenic organism that causes it, pointing to the evolution of
antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria and the appearance of
mutant viruses able to evade vaccines. The article went on to
explain the "hygiene hypothesis," which holds that exposure to
infections in childhood may prevent chronic disease later in life
and that "intervening in infections may have undesireable effects on
the hosts - that is, on people - as well as on the pathogens
themselves."
The article in The Economist
reviewed a number of new medical studies around the world which back
up the hygiene hypothesis. In a study in Guinea-Bissau, researchers
found that children who had not had measles disease were
significantly more likely to suffer from allergies including asthma,
eczema and hay-fever. In Italy, researchers found that children who
were exposed to hepatitis A disease were less likely to suffer from
allergies. And a study published in a November 1997 Archives of
Disease in Childhood showed that children in England who had
suffered a severe respiratory infection in childhood were less
likely to acquire Type 1 diabetes.
One theory being forwarded to explain
why recovery from naturally occurring childhood diseases is
important is that the human immune system has evolved over tens of
thousands of years to respond to and be strengthened by attacks from
viruses and bacteria. Depriving the developing immune system of
naturally occurring infections in childhood may cause the immune
system to eventually attack itself, which is what happens in
autoimmune diseases like asthma and diabetes.
Unvaccinated Children Have Less
Asthma - In an article entitled "The Dark Side of
Immunizations?," Science News reviews new reports by
researchers that show that vaccinated children have a higher
incidence of asthma and diabetes than do unvaccinated children.
Science News reports that a study by researchers at the
Wellington School of Medicine in New Zealand found that unvaccinated
New Zealand children report fewer cases of asthma than vaccinated
children.
Another study by New Zealand
researchers published in the November 1997 Epidemiology
analyzed the health of 1,265 people born in 1977. Of these, 23
didn't get any childhood vaccinations and none of them suffered
childhood asthma. Among the 1,242 who got polio and DPT shots, more
than 23 percent later had episodes of asthma.
Science News adds that a 1994
survey of 446 British children, most of them eight years old, showed
that 91 received no vaccinations in early childhood. Only one child
out of 91 got asthma. About 11 percent of the other 355 children who
had been vaccinated with pertussis and other vaccines had asthma.
The article goes on to note that
animal studies indicate that an absence of contact with naturally
occurring viruses increases the risk of diabetes and that research
in humans suggest that some childhood infections may prime a
person's immune system to fight off asthma.
Howard L. Weiner, an immunologist at
Harvard Medical School in Boston, is quoted in the article as saying
that immunization skews the activity of the immune system and "If a
person has a tendency toward a disease at a certain age, a vaccine
might ... make [him or her] more susceptible later, when other
challenges come along." He added, "It's logical that there might be
some immune manipulation that happens in childhood that might have a
positive or negative effect on these diseases."
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