All diseases are not smallpox, and all diseases may not be best avoided. Particularly in the developed world. - SM
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4339555,00.html
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Comment Injecting some sense
The anti-vaccination lobby is mad and
dangerous Johnjoe McFadden Monday January 21,
2002 Save the Children Fund
last week accused a major vaccine programme of putting pharmaceutical
industry profits above the needs of children. A doctor was forced to resign
last month from a London medical school post because of his
anti-establishment views on the potential dangers of measles vaccine. As a
scientist trying to develop new vaccines, I could be forgiven for self-doubt.
Are vaccines all that they are cracked up to be? The answer to that is
that those millions of doses of vaccine annually jabbed into the arms of
children are a needle-thin line protecting humanity from disease. Their
greatest triumph has been the elimination of smallpox, which once killed
millions and scarred the survivors. If you've ever wondered why milkmaids
were so often shown in landscape paintings, it is because their faces were
unscarred - as Edward Jenner surmised, their tendency to catch the milder
cowpox protected them from smallpox. Jenner developed his cowpox vaccine over
200 years ago, but the disease wasn't conquered until the massive vaccination
campaigns of the 20th century. Smallpox has not been
the only conquest. Anyone who has travelled in Africa or India has been
shocked by child beggars dragging polio-ravaged limbs. Do you remember
pictures of wards of people gazing out of rows of iron lungs? Those patients
weren't in hospital for treatment; they were trapped in those machines for
life after polio paralysed their respiratory systems. Polio has been nearly
defeated. The World Health Organisation's heroic efforts are now tackling the
last redoubts of the disease, delivering the heat-sensitive vaccine by camel
in Sudan, bicycle in India and boat in Cambodia and Vietnam. True, all infectious
diseases were not eliminated, even in the West, in the 20th century.
Meningitis, caused by the Hib and MenC bacteria, annually killed hundreds of
children in the UK into the 1990s. In 1992 the Hib vaccine was introduced and
since then Hib disease has almost disappeared. The UK was the first country
to introduce the MenC vaccine in 1999; there was a big reduction of MenC
disease in 2000. There are downsides to
all health interventions, including vaccines. Vaccination may have kept you
free of measles in childhood, but if you are unlucky enough to contract
measles as an adult, it is likely to be more severe. We should remember why
measles, mumps or rubella are diseases of childhood in places where they are
still common: because infectious agents generally infect children soon after
birth. If those children survive, they became immune. For most infections,
disease is the best vaccine. But that immunity comes at a huge cost, as
children that don't quickly develop immunity will die. In the UK, vaccinating
children is like voting. A single vote, or a single vaccination, is rarely
going make any difference. If everyone else's children are vaccinated, herd
immunity will ensure that deadly bacteria or viruses cannot circulate. A few
people can then afford to be "conscientious objectors", because the
vaccination of the majority will keep disease at bay. But as with voting, if everyone
stops, the system collapses. Measles, mumps, rubella or diphtheria haven't
gone away. They are still among us, ready to break out if we let our defences
down. A recent outbreak of measles in the Netherlands was triggered by low
rates of vaccination: 2,961 children were infected and most recovered. But
three died. If too many of us refuse to have our children vaccinated, then
parents will soon be discussing epidemics that are far more deadly than nits.
If vaccine-preventable
diseases take hold again in the UK, the well-fed children of Guardian readers
will not suffer the worst. Measles has a 10% mortality rate among in the
malnourished. But pointing to social deprivation as the cause of disease
doesn't save lives. Vaccines do. And they are one of the cheapest ways to do
it. · Johnjoe McFadden is professor of
molecular genetics at the University of Surrey. |
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