|
With the virtual
elimination of outbreaks of childhood diseases such as smallpox, polio and
meningitis during the past century, it is surprising that the number of
parents challenging recommended vaccine programs is rising. Encouraged by
politicians, the media and anti-vaccine groups, more and more parents are
choosing to exempt their children from vaccines.
Observers note,
however, that most vaccine programs are administered with the public good in
mind, with many communities requiring proper vaccination before children are
allowed to enter day care or primary schools.
In a recent study of
standardized records collected in Colorado from 1987-1998, the evidence was
clear that risk of measles and pertussis disease was associated with
philosophical and religious exemptions to immunization at both the individual
and community levels. Colorado was chosen for the study because it has more
than twice the national average of vaccination exemptors.
The authors reported
that in 1998 among school-aged children in Colorado, the rates of exemption
from immunization were 0.12 percent for medical, 0.19 percent for religious,
and 1.87 percent for philosophical reasons. Their results showed:
- Children aged 3 to 18 who had exemptions
from vaccination were 22 times more likely to acquire measles and nearly
six times more likely to acquire pertussis than immunized children.
- In children of day care or primary school
age (3-10 years), the risks were more than 60-fold greater for
contracting measles and 16-fold greater for pertussis.
- The annual incidence rates of measles and
pertussis among vaccinated children aged 3 to 18 were significantly
associated with frequency of exemptors in that county, with the relative
risks of 1.6 and 1.9 respectively.
Clearly, the critical
issue is whether some parents should be allowed to pace other people's children
at increased risk for disease by refusing immunizations for their own
children. Vaccines still remain the most important strategy in the prevention
of infectious diseases in children.
Source: Kathryn M.
Edwards, MD, "State Mandates and Childhood Immunization," Journal
of the American Medical Association, December 27, 2000
For more on Health
& Biomedicine Regulations http://www.ncpa.org/pd/regulat/reg-7.html
|