Slight Delay in Measles Vaccine Improves
Response
Children who are vaccinated
closer to 15 months of age may gain better protection against measles
compared with those who are immunized around 12 months of age.
Measles is a highly contagious
viral infection that causes a rash, high fever, coughing and other symptoms.
It can also lead to serious complications such as pneumonia and brain
inflammation. Vaccination prevents most cases, and in the US, children
receive two doses of the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine. The first dose
is given at 12 to 15 months of age and the second is given around 4 to 6
years of age to ensure adequate protection.
Researchers from the Mayo
Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota evaluated 333 children who were immunized
against measles at 12 months and 719 children immunized closer to 15 months.
All of the children, who were between the ages of 6 and 11 years and from
the US and Canada, had only one dose of measles vaccine in accord with
recommendations at that time.
Overall, 87% of the US children
and 76% of the Canadian children had measles-fighting antibodies in their
blood. After adjusting for time from immunization and age of immunization,
The researchers found that those children vaccinated closer to 15 months of
age were more than twice as likely to have adequate protection against
measles compared with children immunized at 12 months of age.
The authors note that children
with a few more months of development appear to respond better to
immunization and their immune system produces more antibodies against
measles.
The current US policy of
immunizing with the first dose of measles at the age of 12 months is less
effective than a policy of immunizing at 12 to 15 months of age. These
findings may be highly significant as we move toward an era in which measles
exposure may be rare and policies are developed to eradicate measles.
Mayo Clinic Proceedings May 2002;77:446-452
Any idea what you call this
study?
I call it a clue.
Mayo Clinic is clearly a
reputable center that has shown quite nicely that delaying immunization by
as little as three months produces improved immune responses.
So wake up and stop giving
hepatitis vaccines on the FIRST day of birth, when the child's central
nervous system is so susceptible to damage.
All this is compiled upon
chronic omega-3 deficiencies over the past several generations.
My amazement is that more
children are not coming down with brain injuries. We already have an
epidemic of autism.
Fortunately, you do have
choices. You can do your homework and either significantly delay or never
accept vaccine administration for your children.
It is also relatively easy
to add omega-3 fats to the diet to help protect the brain and enhance the
immune system.
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