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Feature Article
Vaccines (Part II): Hygiene, Sanitation, Immunization,
and Pestilential Diseases
Miguel
A. Faria, Jr., MD
Vaccines
--- Kill or Cure?
As the controversial debate over mandatory vaccine policy heats up igniting passions,
it is perhaps appropriate we summarize what is known about the manifest
benefits of modern vaccines, not forgetting the tremendously salutary impact on
health and longevity wrought about by better living conditions, hygiene and
sanitation, in general, and the introduction and subsequent widespread use of
antibiotics, in particular.
In Part I of this essay, we discussed the history of vaccinations, the
advent of the germ theory of disease, and the ushering in of the dawn of
scientific medicine.(1) In Part II, we will weave into this historic tapestry
the more contemporary history behind some of the many infectious illnesses of
the 20th century and revisit the story as to how they were eradicated. Only
then can we arrive at today's reality over vaccine policy and reach the truth
as to the best possible advice that should presently be given to individual
patients.(2,3)
Officials at the CDC tell us vaccines are "90 percent safe and
effective." And according to UNICEF, vaccines save the lives of at least
1.5 million children every year. Yet, parents are concerned, and increasingly,
dissenting physicians are asking questions and breaking away from the
heretofore monolithic medical ranks. Let's look at the big picture to avoid
missing the forest for the trees.
Growing up, I thought deadly infectious diseases had been conquered long
ago. Yet, in Cuba, I knew of a girl who died of diphtheria, and my father as a
country doctor, diagnosed and treated a case of anthrax and another one of
typhus. When I visited Haiti in 1975 as a medical student, I saw cases of
tetanus and congenital syphilis. In 1982, while I was chief neurosurgical
resident at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta, Georgia, we had in our service,
simultaneously, patients with Pott's Disease, miliary TB with renal involvement
and cerebral tuberculoma (for which we were consulted as to possible removal),
and tubercular meningitis (for which we were to implant a Rickham reservoir for
CNS chemotherapy). Scrofula was the only "classical" TB case missing
in our clinical service!
And with the advent of AIDS and other immune deficiency and immunosuppressed
states, we have seen in the 1990s a resurgence of tuberculosis and other
opportunistic, infectious diseases, e.g., toxoplasmosis, cytomegalovirus (CMV),
etc. In my own practice, I treated patients with chronic fungal meningitis and
bacterial subdural empyemas requiring surgical evacuation. So, infectious
diseases are still with us, and so taking preventive public health measures is
prudent in many circumstances when the public is at risk. With this in mind,
let's look at some of these diseases that are specifically salient to our
discussion, and try to separate the wheat from the chaff in the debate.
Poliomyelitis
In the 1950s, there were 20,000 cases of polio
annually causing more than 1,000 deaths(4); many more thousand victims were
left in iron lungs. This was caused because of the predilection of the polio
virus for the anterior horn cells of the spinal cord and consequent paralysis
of the respiratory muscles. But, what is less known, and this is quite
disconcerting to me, is that between 1923-1953, before the Salk (dead virus)
vaccine was discovered in 1955, the polio death rate in the U.S. and England
declined on its own by 47 percent and 55 percent, respectively.(5) This is not
reported or discussed by the public health establishment but, it seems, only by
independent researchers (see figure 1); neither is the fact that
European countries, which didn't systematically immunize their citizens, also
experienced a precipitous decline in their polio morbidity and mortality
statistics.
And yet, between 1951-1954, before immunization, there were still more than
16,000 cases of polio and nearly 1,900 deaths. It was not until 1991 that polio
was virtually eradicated from the U.S. and other nations of the Western
Hemisphere. There is no question that in this case better hygiene and
sanitation and better living conditions were bringing down the number of cases
of polio, but the vaccine itself, finally, was probably responsible for
dispatching the final blows to the disease.
Today the disease has been completely eradicated, except for the fact that
with the advent of the Sabin (live virus) vaccine in 1959, there had been
iatrogenic cases of polio (up to 8 cases per year) that had developed due to
activation and infection by the live oral polio virus in the vaccine. Due to
this fact, in June 1999, the CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
began advising doctors to use the Salk (dead virus) injected vaccine rather
than the oral vaccine containing the live virus.(6)
(Figure 1. Polio death rate from 1923 to
1953. The graph shows the polio death rate was actually decreasing before
vaccines were introduced. This graph is adopted from Neil Z. Miller's
monograph, Vaccines: Are They Really Safe and Effective?[5])
Diphtheria,
Tetanus, and Pertussis
Diphtheria is caused by Corynebacterium
diphtheriae. The disease begins with a sore throat, fever, and
lymphadenopathy that progresses swiftly to respiratory distress by the
formation of an occluding membrane in the nasopharynx and generalized muscle
paralysis that may result in respiratory arrest. The average annual number of diphtheria
cases in the U.S. between 1920-1922, the three years before vaccine
development, was 175,885.
Between 1900-1930 before the diphtheria vaccine, greater than a 90 percent
decline was noted in this disease by practicing physicians due to better diet,
living conditions, and sanitation,(5) and yet there is no question the diphtheria
toxoid played a significant role in conquering the last 10 percent of fatal
cases of this disease. In 1998, there was only one case in the U.S.
Similar cases can be made for tetanus and pertussis, the two other diseases
targeted by the DPT (Diphtheria, Pertussis, Tetanus) immunizing agent mixture
of precipitated toxoids.
The average annual number of pertussis (whooping cough) cases between
1922-1925 (the 4 years before vaccine development) was 147,271. By 1998, this
figure had fallen so that there were 6,279 cases in the U.S.
And yet, the incidence and severity of pertussis had been declining before
the pertussis vaccine was introduced. From 1900-1935, in the United States and
England, before the vaccine program for whopping cough had been implemented (in
the 1940s), the death rate from this disease had already declined by 79 percent
and 82 percent, respectively (see figure 2).(5)
Unfortunately, despite the great advances in Western nations, as many as
9,000 people, particularly children, still die annually from whopping cough
mostly in Third World countries.
The same may be said for lock jaw (tetanus). The estimated average
annual number of cases between 1922-1926 was 1,314. By 1998, U.S. tetanus cases
had dropped dramatically to 34. Yet, this disease is still with us in
undeveloped nations because of poor living conditions.
(Figure 2. Pertussis death rate from 1900 to 1935. The graph shows the
pertussis death rate had decreased by more than 75 percent before the vaccine
was introduced. This graph is adopted from Neil Z. Miller's monograph, Vaccines:
Are They Really Safe and Effective?[5])
Mumps,
Rubella and Measles
According to the public health figures, the number of mumps cases in
1968 (the year reporting began and the first year after vaccine licensure) was
152,209. We also learn that by 1998 there were 606 cases in the U.S.(4)
Immunity to mumps is acquired naturally or through the mumps, measles,
and rubella (MMR) vaccine.
The average annual number of rubella (German measles) cases between
1966-1968, the 3 years before vaccine licensure, was 47,745, and there were 345
cases in the U.S. in 1998. The estimated average annual number of cases of congenital
rubella syndrome between 1966-1968, the 3 years before vaccine licensure,
was 823. By 1998, there were only 5 cases in the U.S.
During the 1964-1965 season, before immunization to German measles was
available, 20,000 infants suffered from an outbreak of congenital rubella with
deafness, blindness, and mental retardation. They contracted their disease as
babies from infected mothers in uterus. Otherwise, rubella had not been
a particularly difficult illness (i.e., when acquired naturally as a childhood
disease). In fact, it's self-limited and frequently so mild it can escape
detection. Congenital rubella in newborns is a different and more devastating
disease than the childhood illness. Prevention is geared toward preventing
expectant mothers from getting rubella and avoiding its transmission in uteri
to their babies. MMR has been effective in reducing the incidence of these
diseases and controlling outbreaks, although routine public health measures
e.g., better hygiene and sanitation cannot be ignored.
From 1958-1962, before the measles
(attenuated live virus) vaccine, an excess of 500,000 Americans contracted the
virus annually and suffered the illness, according to government figures.
Although for most children contraction of this usually self-limited illness was
a rite of passage, for some, 1 per 1,000, it led to complications, the most
dramatic being measles encephalitis. With the advent of the measles,
mumps, rubella vaccine (MMR), the government reported there were only 89 cases
in 1998. Not everyone agrees with this assessment, and again independent
researchers counter that a significant decline in measles took place before
vaccination was introduced in the United States and England. And, in fact,
before the inception of the measles vaccine (1963), from 1915-1958, a 95
percent decline took place in measles death rate (see figure 3).
That is, the measles death rate dropped from approximately 13.3 deaths per
100,000 population in 1900 to 0.03 deaths per 100,000 in 1955. Moreover,
post-vaccination death rates for measles in the mid-1970s are similar to those
of the pre-vaccination years in the early 1960s.(5)
Public health and the press have nothing but praise for vaccination
programs, even mandatory immunization. For example, a recent (but
typical) newspaper article reports: "Many Americans have either forgotten
or never lived through the periods when children used to die from outbreaks of
diseases such as measles or polio."(7) In this instance, the reporter
quotes Dr. Walter Orenstein, director of the CDC's National Immunization
Program, who noted that in a regional epidemic of measles in Los Angeles peaking
as late as 1990, 4,549 cases of measles were reported with 12 deaths. The point
being that the disease is still there and dangerous. Yet, Barbara Fisher,
president of the Vienna, Virginia-based National Vaccine Information Center
(NVIC), countered that during this measles outbreak (1989-1990), "a whole
group of young mothers who had been vaccinated against measles, and therefore
only had temporary, artificial immunity were not able to give their babies the
protection unvaccinated mothers had given them. We saw a lot of measles in very
young babies where they did not naturally occur before."(8) In other
words, active immunization did not provide mothers with the long lasting
immunity that is provided by acquiring the disease naturally.
In some of these infants, she speculated, the mother wasn't able to pass her
immunity to them as babies because they had not contracted and overcome the
natural measles virus during their childhood and therefore couldn't pass this
immunity on to their babies which would otherwise have protected them for 12-15
months after birth.
(Figure 3. Measles death rate from 1915 to 1958. The graph shows the
measles death rate had decreased by more than 95 percent before the vaccine was
introduced. This graph is adopted from Neil Z. Miller's monograph, Vaccines:
Are They Really Safe and Effective?[5])
Smallpox
The conquest of smallpox is one of the great triumphs of public health and
immunization, as I described in Part I of this article.1 The disease has now
been completely eradicated from the world.
In 1900, 21,064 cases of smallpox were reported in the U.S. of which
894 persons died. According to the CDC, the average annual number of smallpox
cases between 1900-1904 was 48,164.4 There have been no reported cases of smallpox
in the U.S. since 1950, and no cases worldwide since 1977. Routine vaccination
for smallpox ended in 1971. Dr. Jane Orient tells me that the U.S. government
has somewhere in storage over a million doses of the vaccine, but whether they
are still effective is open to question.
Chickenpox
(Varicella)
Chickenpox is a childhood illness which confers lifelong immunity to most
children it afflicts without serious complications. The vaccine's
"duration of protection is unknown at present, and the need for booster
doses has not yet been clearly defined. Moreover, vaccination is considered
unnecessary by many authorities because 95 percent of American children get it
by age 9. And the illness is not particularly difficult for children. In fact,
the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) as late as 1996 instructed in its
immunization brochure that "most children who are otherwise healthy and
get chickenpox won't have any complications from the disease." It is
speculated the chickenpox vaccination has been implemented to reduce the number
of work hours parents lose by staying home tending to their sick children. The
chickenpox vaccination was added to the children's immunization regimen in
1995.
Rotavirus
(Diarrhea) Vaccine
About 1 million infants were immunized with RotaShield between its approval
in September 1998 and its suspension in July 1999 because of its etiological
link to severe intussusception in babies. Fifty-three of these infants required
surgery, two died, and another 47 required urgent medical attention for their
bowel obstruction caused by the vaccine-induced intussusception. The Rotavirus
vaccine was discussed in a recent issue of the Medical Sentinel.(9)
Hepatitis
B
The risk of infants contracting hepatitis B is close to non-existent.
Yet, serious adverse effects from the vaccine, including 48 deaths, are being
reported three times as frequently as cases of hepatitis B in children under
the age of 14. This immediately begs for the question of why? There is no
question the vaccine is appropriate for high risk populations such as
prostitutes and IV-drug abusers; police and medical emergency personnel, who
may come in contact with infected blood; as well as surgeons, nurses and health
care workers, because these are high risk occupations, but why newborn infants
with extremely immature immune systems and who, being so young, are not exposed
to the risks of contracting this disease?
Recently, the AAP and the U.S. Public Health Service have come to their
senses and changed their policy regarding hepatitis B vaccination: Mothers are
to be tested during pregnancy, and if they are negative for hepatitis B, then
the child's vaccine may be delayed until age 6 months. Nevertheless, Parents
Requesting Open Vaccine Education (PROVE), an Austin, Texas-based grassroots
organization founded in 1997, have objected to the fact that "parents in
Texas and many other states, based on their own assessment of disease versus
vaccine risks, don't have a legal right to personally exempt their children
from the hepatitis B vaccine which is now required for most school children
entering kindergarten."(8) Furthermore, this group remains concerned
because 10,000 to 12,000 reports of vaccine reactions are added each year to a
federally run vaccine database, and of this, roughly 20 percent are classified
as serious.(10)
Federal guidelines issued in 1991 and still in place recommend 3 doses of
the hepatitis B vaccine for health professionals, who come into contact with
blood, and individuals at risk, e.g., drug abusers, people with multiple sex
partners, as well as every child born after 1990.(11)
In fact, for the year 1996, the CDC reported only 54 cases of the disease
occurring in infants under age 1, out of 3.9 million births that year,(10) and
at a U.S. congressional committee on Government Reform (May 18, 1999) looking
into the problems of hepatitis B vaccines, a CDC official disclosed there were
only 279 cases of hepatitis B under age 14 that year. The total annual
incidence of hepatitis B is estimated at between 150,000 to 300,000 by the same
government official. Although the published figures in the MMWR for 1997 is
10,000 hepatitis B cases, the CDC states that the "vast majority of cases
go unreported because the hosts are asymptomatic or mistake the reaction for
the flu."(11)
Hepatitis A is a disease transmitted by the fecal/oral contamination
route, primarily via unwashed hands after toilet use or the handling of
contaminated food or water. Recently, infants living in Texas and Oklahoma,
bordering with Mexico are required to be immunized against this disease,
although the duration of protection has not been established, and it's unknown
whether immunity will even last until adulthood.
Then there is insidious hepatitis C (HCV, formerly known as hepatitis
non-A, non-B). A recent article in Science reports that worldwide
hepatitis C afflicts some 170 million people with an infection rate 4 times as
high as for HIV: "In the U.S., the annual death rate for HCV-caused
cirrhosis or liver cancer may overtake that from AIDS within the next few
years."(12) In the U.S., HCV causes 8,000 to 10,000 deaths annually and
accounts for the largest number of liver transplantations. Of the 75-85 percent
of patients that continue to have chronic hepatitis C after a bout with this
enigmatic disease, 20 percent eventually develop cirrhosis and 1 to 5 percent
liver cancer. The problem with HCV is that it is genetically different from
hepatitis B and there are more than 100 strains, making vaccination research
and development efforts difficult, if not futile at this time. Hepatitis C
poses a threat to the world, a fact underscored by its transmission via blood
transfusions before a screening blood test was developed in 1990. While sexual
transmission may or may not occur, the most common modes of contracting this
disease are contaminated needles and perinatal transmission which occurs in
about 6 percent of babies born to infected mothers.(12)
Typhoid
Fever, Typhus and Cholera
Typhoid fever and typhus are completely different diseases. And yet, while
bacteria cause typhoid fever and rickettsias typhus, both
afflictions have been associated with poor hygiene and sanitation and have been
confused clinically in the past. During the Spanish American War in 1898, more
men were lost to typhoid fever than were killed in battle. Much of the same can
be said about typhus in World War I. Cleanliness, improved hygiene and
sanitation and better living conditions conquered both of these diseases;
although DDT, the much maligned pesticide, had a significant impact in
controlling typhus (body lice), just as it did malaria (Anopheles mosquitoes)
by eliminating the insect vectors. Clean potable water along with proper
disposal of sewage played major roles in controlling typhoid fever and cholera.
Although much has been said about overcrowding in urban, industrial areas,
the advent of the Industrial Revolution was a formidable event working against
most infectious diseases. It brought an improved standard of living, better
nutrition, cheap soap, and inexpensive cotton clothing, clothing which could
now be washed and rendered free of lice --- all of which contributed
significantly to the eradication of typhus.(13) The use of effective
antibiotics such as chloramphenical and tetracycline (along with re-hydration
in cases of cholera) were pivotal factors for those already ill with these
diseases. Vaccinations for these agents in targeted populations has been
helpful, but did not play the same critical role as these aforementioned
measures.
Tuberculosis
Between 1930 and 1987, such diseases as syphilis, pneumonia, typhoid fever
and typhus and the old consumptive killer, tuberculosis, were
controlled, not only because of better hygiene and sanitation but also because
of the newly developed antibiotics. Vaccines played an insignificant role, if
any at all with these diseases.
Tuberculosis, the White Death, dropped from the top of the list of human
killers to #21 in the morbidity and mortality statistics during the middle of
the century. As a result, life expectancy climbed from 59.7 years in 1930 to
74.9 years by 1987.(13)
Before the advent of scientific medicine, tuberculosis was a devastating and
dreaded disease. The dreaded illness had been, in fact, christened the White
Death because the skin of those afflicted turned alabaster white, thin and
translucent, making small veins visible. The White Death took both the poor and
rich, the destitute and the affluent, the masses and the intellectuals. The
Who's Who of 19th century European literature succumbed to this disease including,
Anthony Trollope; Emily, Anne, and Charlotte Brontë; Henry David Thoreau,
Frédéric Chopin, John Keats, Franz Kafka, and many others. The year
Existentialist philosopher Franz Kafka died in 1924 there were over 200,000
Americans who also died from tuberculosis. The conquest of tuberculosis at that
time was not due to vaccination with BCG (Bacille Calmette-Guérin) a live,
attenuated mycobacterium strain, which was developed later in the 20th century.
This vaccine has not been proven to be uniformly effective. The conquest of TB
was due to the advances made in understanding the pathogenesis of tuberculosis
and its milieu, better education, isolation, use of x-ray, the old standbys ---
better hygiene and sanitation --- and, of course, the use of effective antibiotics
e.g., streptomycin (1952), isoniazid (1953), and rifampin (1969).
In the 1990s, there was a resurgence of TB among the immunocompromised AIDS
patients. Moreover, there was a multiple drug resistant (MDR) strain of
tuberculosis reported in the U.S. in 1992, and although the situation seems to
have stabilized, MDR TB continues to be reported in infected immigrants
entering the U.S.
In 1998, TB incidence was 6.8 per 100,000 people, and immigrants, barely 10
percent of the American population, accounted for 42 percent of the 18,361
reported cases of tuberculosis in the U.S.
Multiple drug resistant TB continues to be reported with increased frequency
in Europe, Asia (particularly communist China), and Africa.(14)
The Surgeon General, David Satcher, M.D., tells us, "We must therefore
approach it as a global, public health problem, partnering with multi-national
organizations, the pharmaceutical industry, and other nations to seek
solutions."(15)
AIDS
Despite the publicity given this affliction and the politicization of this
disease, the total number of victims of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
(AIDS) has topped 400,000 in the U.S., a high number, but it has taken nearly
two decades to reach this number. By comparison, tuberculosis claimed 200,000 lives
in a single year in a country with a much smaller population. An estimated 10.7
million people are infected with both HIV and tuberculosis.(15)
As of March 1999, there have been 700,000 cases of AIDS reported since
January 1981, the year the epidemic began. Last year (1998) there were about
48,000 new cases reported and approximately 20,000 deaths. While medical
researchers have arduously sought a vaccine, no major breakthrough has taken
place yet. If the U.S. develops vaccines against HIV, they may be recommended
to the entire population since presumably "we are all at risk of
AIDS."
In Africa, AIDS (with HIV type II, a different virus common in
heterosexuals), a true pandemic, has spread like a wild fire because of the
virulence of this virus as well as cultural lifestyle differences. In the
Central African Republic, Zimbabwe and other African nations, the infection
rate may be as high as 30 percent according to the World Health Organization
(WHO); in another report, testing of military units in Zimbabwe revealed a 90
percent infection rate.(16)
Additional
Vaccines Coming Down the Pipe
There is research being conducted for more than 200 vaccines, many of which
may be considered for mandatory administration.(17) These include herpes,
chlamydia, and even cocaine addiction! Regarding this latter malady, Dr.
Kristine Severyn at the 56th annual AAPS meeting in Coeur D'Alene, Idaho in
1999, reported that conceivably this vaccine would be given to all children to
avoid embarrassing those who have high risk parents and thus may potentially
suffer diminution of their self-esteem.
Between 1963 to 1998, there have been six new vaccines added to the
mandatory vaccine regimen already in place in the U.S. This vaccine schedule
now includes: 1) DPT (Diphtheria, Pertussis, Tetanus) total of 5 doses; 2) 5
doses of live oral polio (Sabin) should already have been replaced by the Salk
(dead virus) vaccine shots by January 1, 2000; 3) 2 doses of live measles,
mumps, and rubella (MMR); 4) 4 doses of Hemophilus influenzae type B
(Hib). This vaccine was approved in 1990 to prevent Hemophilus meningitis in
children; 5) 3 doses of hepatitis B vaccine; 6) Between September 1998-July 15,
1999, when it was discontinued, children also received three oral Rotavirus
diarrhea vaccine; 7) Chickenpox was added to the regimen in 1995 and consists
of a single dose.
By different counts it is estimated that between 21 to 33 doses of
vaccinations are given to children and infants before the first grade. Could
these vaccines adversely affect the developing immune systems of infants and
young children? Many authorities believe that this is so, although there is no
absolute scientific proof as of yet that this is the case.
During the period 1963-1998, immunization rates for American children under
age 3 rose from between 60 and 80 percent in 1967 for MMR, polio, and DPT to
between 80 to 95 percent for these vaccines, as well as the Hib and hepatitis B
vaccines, according to the Morbidity and Mortality weekly report of the
CDC.(18) And until July 1999, infants were inoculated with hepatitis B vaccine
shortly after birth, but as we mentioned earlier, the AAP and the CDC have
recommended that this vaccine now be held until age 6 months.
Before children can enter kindergarten, they are required by law in all 50
states to be immunized with a complicated regimen of a variety of viral and
bacteria immunization agents against at least nine contagious illnesses. The
following chart shows figures for the number of cases per 1,000 of various
contagious illnesses reported between 1970-1994. It shows a progressive decline
in the incidence of most of these illnesses: diphtheria, polio, tetanus,
measles, mumps and pertussis, as a result of preventive public health measures
including vaccines (see table 1).(19)

Nevertheless, concerns remain. It was the swine flu vaccination tragedy in
1976 that precipitated a rash of cases of Gillain-Barré syndrome, and elicited the
first signs of concerns from the public. Since then, the CDC's own reported
figures show 10,000 to 12,000 vaccine reactions occurring annually (of which 20
percent are serious). And even these figures are questioned. Barbara Fisher,
president of the NVIC, asserts "even the FDA has acknowledged that only 10
percent of all adverse reactions are reported."(8)
And there is more. There are the disturbing reports by advocacy groups as
well as independent researchers that raise the possibility of casual links between
MMR and DPT (particularly the pertussis portion) and asthma(20) and autism(21);
diabetes and the meningitis Hib vaccine(22,23); and between the hepatitis B
vaccine and multiple sclerosis, chronic fatigue syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis,
and other autoimmune disorders.(24-28) Although the CDC reports that all
these claims have been investigated and remain uncorroborated, the skepticism
and concern remains.
The
Anthrax Controversy and the Threat of Bioterrorism
I would be remiss if I didn't list and mention anthrax. In Part I of this
article, we discussed anthrax in relation to the historic contribution of Dr.
Louis Pasteur. Today, anthrax is at the vortex of the vaccine controversy
because many military per-sonnel are refusing to be vaccinated against this
disease, despite expressed orders to do so. Anthrax has not only been
considered suitable for biological warfare, but an ideal agent for
bioterrorism, because the organism is one of the deadliest bacteria known to
man and its spores are extremely resistant, almost indestructible.
Although the usual strain of anthrax is sensitive to ordinary antibiotics,
such as doxycycline or ciprofloxacin, the new strains are resistant, making
U.S. troops vulnerable to enemy attack, particularly in the volatile and dangerous
Middle East, where dictators such as Saddam Hussein of Iraq are believed to
possess stockpiles of the virulent organism. Moreover, uncorroborated rumors
have been circulated that genetically altered strains have been created in the
laboratory for germ warfare. Needless to say, our troops could be at risk when
they are sent to troubled spots around the world by the UN as
"peacekeepers," including the Middle East. Yet, military personnel
have been court-martialed rather than receive the anthrax vaccine because of
safety concerns, including the belief that the vaccine is related to the
nebulous disease complex referred to as Gulf War Syndrome.(29,30) Although
textbooks of military medicine state the vaccine is "safe and
effective,"(31) this assertion is refuted by other authoritative texts.
For example, one text states the current vaccines are impure and chemically
complex, elicit only slow onset protective immunity, provide incomplete
protection, and cause significant adverse reactions."(32)
Conflicts
of Interest
One of the most troubling aspects of the issue of vaccine policy is the cozy
public-private partnership developing between supposedly disparate interests,
militating for what an article in The Village Voice refers to as the
rise of the Vaccine Nation and the concomitantly arising conflict of
interest in this "partnership." The relationship extends all the
way to organized medicine where AMA past president Nancy Dickey, M.D. has
called for a new public-private partnership between public health and
(organized) medicine: "As our health system has developed, there have been
few incentives for collaboration and interaction between medicine and public
health. So what has happened is that public health now zeroes in on certain
populations and certain aspects of health care while the doctor continues to
treat illness on a case-by-case basis. But the rising costs of health care and
the dominance of managed care in medicine and public health are creating a new
reality for all of us...Medicine and public health must re-evaluate our
relationship --- because in today's increasingly complex, dollar-driven world
--- we can no longer accomplish our missions alone."(33)
But let us return to the serious conflict of interest implications raised in
The Village Voice article which states: Clearly, the rise of the
Vaccine Nation represents a boon for public health, but it also offers untold
opportunities for profit. In 1997, vaccine sales brought in about $1 billion
for Merck, the leading vaccine manufacturer, and the industry now has about 42
new vaccines in the pipeline. Last year, the twin goals of public health and
profiteering converged in the form of the Vaccine Initiative, a PR campaign
launched by several medical societies to promote universal immunization. Last
week, the group adopted a new name, the National Immunization Information
Network (NIIN), after attracting new partners and replacing its startup grants
from vaccine manufacturers with funding from the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation, the philanthropic arm of Johnson and Johnson.(34)
The article went on to report how The New Yorker magazine which had
joined the Robert Wood Johnson immunization bandwagon along with The Wall
Street Journal, The New York Times, and The Washington Post,
contained its pro-vaccine pieces adjacent to health-related ad sections of the
pharmaceutical industry's leading trade association (PhRMA), whose marketing
tag line reads, "America's pharmaceutical companies: Leading the way in
the search for cures."(34)
Before 1960, there were only a few vaccines that were administered for
rampant diseases that were known to have posed a clear and present danger, an
immediate and imminent epidemiologic threat. Today, it seems that the public
health establishment is obsessed with developing vaccines against every
conceivable microorganism, and these government programs are bent to include
everyone, every child, every infant in the immunization loop. And yet, at
this time, the medical evidence should tilt the balance of the debate towards
the government allowing parents and individuals to be armed with reliable
vaccine information. So empowered, as individuals and masters of their own
destiny, citizens and parents should be allowed to make their own decisions or
those of their children with their private physicians. As an AAPS physician
explained back in 1960 regarding the issue of immunization: "I am certain
of one thing, that the most fundamental element in our American system of
medical care is mutual responsibility of a personal physician and that
individual patient to his physician. This mutual interest is not served by a
scramble for "free" production line care, but by a personal visit
by a personal visit by a doctor's personal patient to his personal doctor."(35)
Thus in concluding, perhaps, it is worth repeating: ...the pages of medical
history are replete with indisputable evidence that physicians, upholding the
Oath and individual-based ethics of Hippocrates, actually benefit not only
their individual patients but also society, secondarily. In other words,
physicians working in the enlightened best interest of their patients actually
result in tangible benefits to humanity as a whole. On the other hand, the
historic record also reveals, in this very century, when that is not the case
and physicians become agents of the state, rather than advocates of their
patients, events go awry. Physicians become preoccupied with preventive health
measures and the so-called proper allocation of scarce resources, rather than
the health of their individual patients. The result is that medicine becomes
subordinated to, and physicians act as agents of, the state, a situation which
is as perverse as it is disastrous. It's time physicians choose: In
vaccination, as in everyday practice, is it the dictate of your conscience to
abide by the individual-based Oath and ethics of Hippocrates or to comply with
the collectivist morality of population-based medicine?(1)
References
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choice? And Part II - Vaccines, a miracle of modern medicine? February 1999.
18. Morbidity Mortality Weekly Report, April 2, 1999. http://www.cdc.gov/
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No. 1065, February 1999. http://www.aapsonline.org.
Dr. Faria is a consultant neurosurgeon and author of Vandals at the
Gates of Medicine (1995) and Medical Warrior: Fighting Corporate
Socialized Medicine (Macon, Georgia, Hacienda Publishing, Inc, 1997). He is
also Editor-in-Chief of the Medical Sentinel.
Originally published in the March/April 2000 issue of the Medical
Sentinel. Copyright ©2000 Association of American Physicians and Surgeons.
ALL
INFORMATION, DATA, AND MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR
GENERAL INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE
KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED
AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO
VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU
ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.