from
Contemporary
Pediatrics
Posted 05/22/2003
Abstract
The sheer number of recommended
childhood immunizations makes it imperative that pediatricians be able to
recognize and treat allergic reactions and identify those children in whom
revaccination is contraindicated.
Introduction
Routine childhood immunizations
represent one of the greatest advances in public health of the 20th
century. Previously lethal childhood infections -- measles, paralytic
poliomyelitis, congenital rubella -- are no longer commonly seen. Invasive
Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) disease has been virtually
eradicated. In recent years, the incidence of varicella has appreciably
declined. However, as the number of routine immunizations has increased --
the average child born in 2002 will receive 23 immunizations for 11
different diseases by the time he is 6 years old -- so have public
concerns about vaccine safety.
In lay circles, blame for a
variety of conditions has been laid at the feet of childhood vaccines;
addressing those concerns is beyond the scope of this article. This review
focuses instead on clinical adverse reactions -- allergic and nonallergic
-- to required childhood vaccinations. Of the 1.9 billion doses of
vaccines administered in the United States between 1991 and 2001, only
2,281 cases of allergic reactions were reported.[1] (By way of
comparison, the estimated incidence, in the pediatric population, of
allergic reactions to food of any kind is 6% to 8%; the incidence of
allergy to an antibiotic in the same population is reported to be 7.3%.[2])
Although allergic reactions to vaccines are rare, the general pediatrician
must nonetheless be able to recognize and treat such reactions, as well as
the far more common nonallergic reactions. What's more, in light of the
multiple dose regimens of many pediatric vaccines, the general
practitioner must be able to identify those children in whom revaccination
is contraindicated to avoid a potentially life-threatening event.
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