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Many reports and articles are published in newspapers and magazines from time to
time that ‘reveal’ the great risks and fatal facts about vaccines and how they
can harm our child. They give statistics, data and case studies that prove that
vaccination and immunization are actually pushing our children to their doom
rather than giving them a healthy and disease-free life. MMR vaccines are
alleged to cause autism and inflammation in bowel movements. These reports
confuse parents and they worry about whether to give vaccines to their children
or not. In this article, we will discuss some facts, tips and glimpses from the
past that will help you to decide whether vaccines are good or bad.
In the pre-vaccine era, at least one child in each neighborhood suffered from
polio and used to crawl or had a fitted iron leg. In pediatrics, in the
whooping-cough ward, the doctors still cannot forget the sounds of children
coughing and choking because of pneumonia. Incidents of brain damage from
encephalitis caused by measles and the birth defects in babies whose mothers had
German measles during pregnancy were very common. Meningitis and chicken pox
were not only common but also fatal to little children. Due to the false alarm
of reaction to DTP vaccine, Great Britain once temporarily stopped the routine
use of the vaccine and the rise of whooping cough was quite alarming.
Thus, we can say that vaccines are a necessary public health measure and the
vaccine schedule recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics is one of the
most followed one. Immunizations and vaccines help to stimulate child's immune
defenses and produce antibodies against particular illnesses by introducing dead
or weakened germs in the body. This helps the immune system to fight real germs
so that they result in no or only mild symptoms of the disease. Doctors and
vaccine policy makers give license only to those vaccines, which have more
benefits the potential risks posed by them and the goal of worldwide vaccination
policy is to eventually eliminate or at least reduce the prevalence and severity
of diseases.
Smallpox was once considered a fatal or serious illness and hence the benefits
of smallpox vaccine outweighed the risks associated with the vaccine. Later,
when the disease was eradicated, routine smallpox vaccination is no more a part
of the worldwide vaccination policy. Similarly, the decreasing cases of polio
may result in the discontinuation of routine polio vaccinations after sometime.
Most of the bad news or reports about vaccine reactions are greatly hyped up,
have no substantial proofs to support them or are about vaccines that are no
longer used. The DTaP or the acellular DTP vaccine that has a significantly
lower risk of reaction has long replaced the old DTP vaccine, which such reports
often criticize.
Similarly, according to researches by American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
Committee on Infectious Diseases, that there are no evidences available to
substantially prove the alleged link between autism and the
measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine or the MMR vaccine and inflammatory-bowel
disease. Similarly, it was also found that separate administrations of measles,
mumps and rubella vaccines to children are not at all beneficial and may also
result in delayed or missed immunizations. Though, an overall vaccine policy is
a good guide to follow, perhaps, concerned parents may like to discuss the
child’s vaccination schedule with their doctors and get it tailored according to
the medical history and lifestyle and circumstances of the family for still
better results.
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