Wednesday, June 5, 2019
Importance of Vaccinations
Importance of VaccinationsKasandra PadillaEach family the Department of Health and Human Services releases a list, essentially a schedule, of plectronal vaccines for children 0-18 months. Although these shots are non required, they are highly recommended. However, in recent years there has been speculation that the rise in childhood immunizations has caused excessive and supernumerary medical issues among children in the United States. This hearsay, spurred on by a handful of studies, birdcalls causal relationships between developmental disabilities and sealed elements found in vaccines. These studies, along with true religious teachings and personal beliefs, baffle caused a number of parents across the United States to opt out of inject their children. This decision has, unfortunately, caused the recent outbreaks of several, previously manageable, viruses in a number of Americas cities. In his article Anti-Vaccination Movement Causes a Deadly Year in the U.S. (2013), Brian Krans stated, The anti-vaccination movement continues to leave the door open to outbreaks of diseases that bind been all but eradicated by modern medicine. These diseases include measles, acute anterior poliomyelitis, whooping cough, and more. According The Center for Disease Control CDC measles is con alignred to be the deadliest childhood disease (2013), and all previously mentioned diseases (measles, polio, and whooping cough) are spread easily and simply by coming in contact with an infected individual. Although, in some cases, there whitethorn be side effects to certain vaccinations, the positive aspect of beingness immunized against a number of fatal diseases far outweighs the possible effects or reactions that may occur.Firstly, as briefly mentioned, vaccines save children from preventable diseases. Children are going to be children. So, parents protect them from sharp pointy objects, install gates to protect them from unsafe areas of the house, only feed them certain food for the first few months of their life, and do non feed them other foods until a certain age. Vaccines are another way to prevent ones child from danger. According to Dr. Vincent Iannelli, a pediatrician in Dallas, Texas, todays parents did not grow up in an era riddled with disease homogeneous Polio and therefore often forget the importance of vaccines (Vaccine Preventable Diseases, 2014). The World Health Organization WHO fact sheet classifies polio as, a highly infected disease caused by a virus. It invades the nervous system, and can cause total paralysis in a matter of hours, and includes symptoms such as, fever, fatigue, headache, vomiting, stiffness in the uterine cervix and pain in the limbs (2014). Global Health Strategies GHS, an international consulting firm that focuses on research in health care, mirrors Dr. Ianellis view and the issue of Polio, Few guess a time in the US in the 1940s and 50s when fear of this crippling disease pervaded all pockets of society. Ima ges of shuttered swimming pools and children in iron lungs and on crutches colored every mothers daily worries (2012). Therefore, due to the effectiveness of the very vaccines that they often contest, some individuals may not see to it the severity and complexity of a disease.Individuals that choose not to vaccinate their children, known as anti-vaxxers, sometimes claim religious beliefs as the main reason for choosing not to immunize their children. One main issue that people cite is that certain vaccines contain fibroblast cells of foetal tissue. These fibroblast cells aid in holding connective tissue in concert (Hot Topics Fetal Tissues, 2013). According to Paul Offit, a doctor at The Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia, the tissue resulted from two terminated pregnancies that occurred in 1960, and No further sources of fetal cells are needed to make these vaccines (2013). In other words these cells are not taken from fetuses today, like some anti-vaxxers claim. In the same arti cle Dr. Offit continues on to state that these cells are used for two reasons Viruses need cells to grow and tend to grow better in cells from humans than animals (because they infect humans), and because of the Hayflick limit, where cells die after being divided a certain number of times, fetal cells are used because they are able to go through many more divisions before last (2013). Dr. Offit excessively notes, in Parents Fake Religion to Avoid Vaccines, that religious beliefs have come to be the default because of state laws protecting religious practices, people claim religious exemption when it is that they just do not believe there is a need for immunizations (2007).The second reason that immunizations are beneficial is that they prevent outbreaks from occurring. In her article, Measles Is Spreading In Our Largest Cities Because People Arent Vaccinating Their Kids (2014), Tara Culp-Ressler, the health editor for ThinkProgress, a non-partisan web-based news source, discussed how recent outbreaks have occurred in Boston, San Francisco, San Diego, and Dallas areas. Measles have also recently been reported in suburban areas in Connecticut and Illinois. Anti-vaxxers claim that other countries do not have as many vaccines and they do not experience outbreaks. J.B. Handley (2011) stated Iceland, Sweden, Singapore, Japan, and Norway give 11, 11, 13, 11, and 13 vaccines respectivelyall less than 1/3 the number of vaccines the U.S. mandates. Each vaccine on the CDCs schedule is highly recommended, they are not mandated. If they were mandated no parent would have a choice in vaccinating their child and there would be no exemptions. Also, Handley mentioned that each of these countries only have 11-13 vaccines. The US only has 14 vaccines these fourteen are given in a series from 0-18 months, not 36 sort vaccinations as Handley leads one to believe.It is necessary to highlight, because of the sheer difference in land mass and therefore population size, the populat ion of each of the countries Handley mentioned. The most current statistics record Iceland 326,340 (Statistics Iceland, 2014), Sweden 9.7 million (Statistics Sweden, 2014), Singapore 5.4 million (Department of Statistics Singapore, 2014), Japan 127 million (The World Bank, 2014), Norway 5 million (The World Bank, 2014), and the United States 317.3 million (United States Census Bureau, 2013). These statistics emphasize Handleys defect in comparing countries with a much smaller population to that of the United States, and further underscores the previous inaccuracies contained in his argument regarding vaccination requirements.In countries where they do not promote vaccinations, such as Nigeria, Pakistan and Afghanistan (GHS, 2012), there are outbreaks of several diseases. For example, according to WHO, each of these countries remains endemic (2014). That is to say that communicable disease, such as polio and measles, are found regularly in these parts of the world. The probability of dying before ones fifth birthday in Pakistan is almost 9% (86 in every 1,000 births) (WHO, 2014). Tara Culp-Ressler stated outbreaks in the United States tend to occur because families travel abroad, become infected, and then bring the virus back the US, infecting others who have not been vaccinated (2014).Lastly, vaccines are safe. Due to a handful of studies conducted by the previously mentioned J. B. Handley and Andrew Wakefield, the public now associate vaccines, particularly the MMR vaccine, with causing autism. Each of these individuals has been criticized for their lack of scientific objectivity in their experiments, with Wakefield in particular being barred from practicing medicine in Britain because of his falsified study (BBC, 2010). Unfortunately, their claims still remain on the publics mind. It also does not help to quell the publics concern when a celebrity, Jenny McCarthy, takes these falsified studies and uses them as a platform in an attempt to further excite pa rents with the claim that her child suffers from autism because of the vaccinations he received.A study conducted by Sharpe, Gist, and Baskin (Autism Spectrum Disorder and Their Unaffected Siblings Exhibit Hypersensitivity to Thimerosal, 2013) point their fingers at Thimerosal, which, according to the Immunization Action coalescence (2011), is a preservative that has been used in some vaccines since the 1930s. The CDC, as well as the Immunization Action Coalition, point out that Thimerosal is present in only one grippe vaccine, and has been reduced to trace amounts. It should also be noted that, should one choose, there are other available alternatives to that particular influenza vaccine which contain no Thimerosal (2011). So, this preservative that anti-vaxxers claim causes autism is, in fact, is not contained in the MMR vaccine.Parents, undoubtedly, want to provide the safest environment for their children in order to donjon them out of danger. Vaccinating ones child is no dif ferent. Unfortunately, there is an abundance of information available that can cause a person to timber overwhelmed. When a well-known celebrity is claiming her child suffers from autism because of a vaccine, a great deal of the public is going to believe that individual because she is famous and has resources the parent may not have. These claims perpetuate the myths of preservatives being harmful to a child, or that vaccines are unnecessary because such diseases they protect against have been eradicated when they haven not. Each parent has the option to speak with a doctor regarding vaccinations. In fact, the CDC (2014) recommends speaking to a doctor in order to receive all relevant and up-to-date information so that each person can make an informed decision regarding having their child immunized.ReferencesCountries Pakistan. (2014). Retrieved from http//www.who.int/countries/pak/en/Culp-Ressler, T. (2014, March 14). Measles is spreading in our largest cities because people aren t vaccinating their kids. Retrieved from http//thinkprogress.org/health/2014/03/14/3408461/measles-outbreaks-cities-vaccination/Handley, J. B. (2011) Compelling evidence shows that vaccines trigger autism. Epidemics. Detroit Greenhaven Press.Iannelli, V. (2014, March 30). Vaccine preventable diseases. Retrieved from http//pediatrics.about.com/od/immunizations/a/0408_im_illness.htmInfants, Children, and Teens. (2014) Retrieved from http//www.vaccines.gov/who_and_when/infants_to_teens/index.htmlKey Figures. (2014). Retrieved from http//www.scb.se/en_/Krans, B. (2013). Anti-vaccination movement causes a deadly year in the U.S.. Retrieved from http//www.healthline.com/health-news/children-anti-vaccination-movement-leads-to-disease-outbreaks-120312Latest Key Indicators. (2014). Retrieved from http//www.singstat.gov.sg/Measles Vaccination. (2013). Retrieved from http//www.cdc.gov/vaccines/vpd-vac/measles/default.htmOffit, P. A. (2013). Hot topics fetal tissues. Retrieved from http//www.ch op.edu/service/vaccine-education-center/vaccine-safety/vaccine-ingredients/fetal-tissues.htmlParents Fake Religion to Avoid Vaccines. (2007). Retrieved from http//www.cbsnews.com/news/parents-fake-religion-to-avoid-vaccines/Polio Eradication. (2012). Retrieved from http//ghstrat.com/issues/polioPoliomyelitis. (2014). Retrieved from http//www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs114/en/Population (Total). (2014). Retrieved from http//data.worldbank.org/indicator/SP.POP.TOTLPopulation in the 1st quarter 2014. (2014). Retrieved from http//www.statice.is/Pages/444?NewsID=10348Sharpe, M. A., Gist, T. L., Baskin, D. S. (2013). B-lymphocytes from a population of children with autism spectrum disorder and their unaffected siblings exhibit hypersensitivity to thimerosal. Journal of Toxicology, 2013, 1-11.Thimerosal in Vaccines. (2014). Retrieved from http//www.fda.gov/biologicsbloodvaccines/safetyavailability/vaccinesafety/ucm096228Triggle, N. (2010). fishgig accepts MMR study false. Retrieved from http//news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8493753.stmVaccine Concerns Thimerosal. (2011, February 25). Retrieved from http//www.immunize.org/thimerosal/
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