Duke University Medical Center released a study a couple of weeks ago that showed 91% of patients who are in the intensive care unit (ICU) with influenza this season did not have a seasonal flu vaccine. Another 67% of those admitted to the hospital with less severe cases of the flu also weren't vaccinated. The bottom line is, the flu vaccine works.
The study examined only 55 patients who were admitted to the Duke Medical Center between November of 2013 and January of 2014. But, the cases were well documented. 47% of patients were Caucasian, 42% were African-American and 6% were Hispanic. 49% of patients were in the 18-49 age range, with the median age at 28.5. 33% of the patients were ages 50 to 64.
Duke's numbers are consistent with the national trend this year, that the flu is affecting young or middle aged adults more than infants, toddlers and seniors, who are always at high risk. Patients who were vaccinated but still had the flu had disorders that rendered them immunocompromised, therefore causing the vaccine ineffective.
Cameron R. Wolfe, M.D. was co-author of the study and stated: "Even if you get influenza, the vaccine reduces the likelihood of truly serious disease. These people on the intensive care unit are very sick. If you end up there, you're going to be battling a month or more of hospitalization." Five of the 22 ICU patients had died by the time the study was published.
It's not too late to get a flu vaccine. The FluView shows the states that are still having high flu activity levels. The vaccine generally takes 10-14 days to become effective. Vaccine Watch encourages people with questions and concerns to consult their physician about the flu vaccine options available.
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
High Rate of Adult Deaths from Vaccine Preventable Diseases
The University of Colorado School of Medicine recently
released the results of a study showing that adult vaccination rates for vaccine
preventable diseases are remaining low. This news came after the report that
adults make up 95% of the annual death rate for vaccine preventable diseases.
The death rate is currently at 30,000 people per year. These facts represent a
growing public health concern.
Laura Hurley, MD, MPH is an assistant professor of medicine
at the CU School of Medicine and was the lead author. “Our study suggests that
missed opportunities for adult vaccination are common because vaccination
status is not being assessed at every (physician’s) visit, which is admittedly
an ambitious goal. Also, most physicians are not stocking all recommended
vaccines.”
There are eleven recommended adult vaccines. Estimates have
shown that only 62-65% of adults over age 65 received a pneumococcal or
influenza vaccine. A dismal 20% of high-risk adults between the ages of 19 and
65 received a pneumococcal vaccine and only 16% of those 60 or older got their
shingles vaccine.
“Physicians reported a variety of barriers to vaccine
stocking and administration, but financial barriers dominated the list,” Hurley
continues. “Physicians in smaller, private practice often assume more risks
from stocking expensive vaccine inventories and may be particularly affected by
these financial barriers.” Physicians also struggle to get reimbursed by
insurance companies, a problem that discourages them from stocking vaccines. Physicians
choose to refer patients to pharmacies or public health facilities for
vaccination.
“I feel we need to take a more systematic approach to this
issue,” Hurley concludes. “As the population ages this could easily grow into a
more serious public health issue.”
Vaccine Watch recommends all adults speak with their
physician about recommended vaccines and take the necessary steps to insure
they are protected from vaccine preventable diseases.
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
What is the Alternative Vaccine Schedule?
This article was originally published by WebMD.
By Katherine Karn
WebMD Feature
Experts debate the pros and cons of the alternative vaccine schedule and what it means for parents.
By Katherine Karn
WebMD Feature
Experts debate the pros and cons of the alternative vaccine schedule and what it means for parents.
When pediatrician Robert W. Sears, MD, FAAP, wrote The Vaccine Book: Making the Right Decision for Your Child, he envisioned giving parents more choices on how to vaccinate their children if they were concerned about a vaccine’s side effects or ingredients or the large number of shots that kids receive today.
“A lot of parents don’t really trust the vaccine system,” Sears says. “I felt that if I could give parents a better understanding of vaccines -- as well as an alternative way to approach giving vaccines -- then these families who otherwise might not vaccinate could go ahead and feel comfortable with vaccinating.”
Sears, who practices in San Juan Capistrano, Calif., says that he isn't against vaccinations. Instead, his book suggests an untraditional “alternative” schedule that delays shots or spaces them further apart. If parents are skittish about any shots at all, he offers a separate “selective” schedule to encourage them to give their kids at least the "bare minimum" of vaccinations.
But public health officials say that those approaches leave too many kids unprotected for too long and aren’t backed up by science.
“These altered schedules have not been studied at all,” says Meg Fisher, MD, a pediatric infectious disease specialist and medical director of the Children’s Hospital at Monmouth Medical Center in New Jersey and chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics' section on infectious diseases. "I would rather stay with what we know is the most likely to protect the most people."
Regular, Alternative, Selective Vaccine Schedules
The regular vaccine schedule for children aged 0-6 is approved by the CDC, American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), and the American Academy of Family Physicians.
It recommends 25 shots in the first 15 months of life. The shots immunize against whooping cough (pertussis), diphtheria, tetanus, mumps, measles, rubella, rotavirus, polio, hepatitis B, and other diseases.
The alternative and selective vaccination schedules aren't reviewed or approved by the CDC or other public health group. They come solely from Sears.
Sears’ alternative vaccine schedule spreads the shots out over a longer period of time, up to age 5-6 years. For instance, he recommends not giving kids more than two vaccines at a time. It also changes the order of vaccines, prioritizing what Sears believes are the most crucial vaccines to get, based on how common and severe the diseases are.
As Sears writes, “If some of the theoretical problems with vaccines are real, this schedule circumvents most of them. If the problems aren’t real, then the only drawback is the extra time, effort, and cost for the additional doctor’s office visits.”
For parents who are the most reluctant to vaccinate, his selective vaccination schedule includes what he calls the "bare minimum" vaccinations against serious and common diseases, such as whooping cough and rotavirus. It also omits some vaccines, including the one for polio.
Vaccine Watch encourages parents considering the alternative vaccine schedule to consult their pediatrician.
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Pediatrician & Mother Talks About Flu Vaccine
This was originally posted on The Mom's Guide to San Diego and was written by Dr. Jaime Friedman.
As a local pediatrician, and part of the medical group that partners with the Mom’s Guide to San Diego, I felt it was very important to respond to a recent thread of posts on the Mom’s Guide Facebook page regarding flu vaccines. The media often highlights extreme medical cases for the sake of the “story”, sometimes without providing thorough information on the topic for the viewer to come to their own educated conclusion.
Every year many thousands of people become ill with influenza. Of those, hundreds to thousands die. Unfortunately, while the very old, very young and chronically ill are most severely affected, many who die of influenza are perfectly healthy. Influenza should not be confused with the common cold or a viral illness causing vomiting and diarrhea. It is more severe, causing sudden onset of high fever, body aches and fatigue. Many people also experience a cough, headache, sore throat, or diarrhea. The illness is very uncomfortable and can result in pneumonia, bronchitis or sinusitis. It also can exacerbate chronic illnesses including asthma. Most people are sick for 1-2 weeks.
The best ways to prevent the flu are good hand washing and vaccination. The vaccine was first introduced in the 1940s for the military. Since then it has repeatedly been perfected and proven to be safe and effective. In fact, each year the vaccine is altered to keep up with the mutating virus. The vaccine works by introducing proteins from the surface of the virus into the body so that the individual can make their own antibodies to the virus. The injected vaccine is NOT a live virus and one cannot get the flu from the vaccine. Because the vaccine is given during respiratory virus season many people develop other illnesses around the same time as vaccination and mistake that illness for “getting the flu from the shot”. Also, it takes 2 weeks for the vaccine to be effective so exposure to the virus around the time of vaccination can still result in illness. Some common side effects include soreness at injection site, feeling achy and low grade fever for 1-2 days. These symptoms are far less severe than actually having an influenza infection. There is also a live attenuated vaccine available that is sprayed into the nose. While this is a live virus it is weakened so that it does not cause infection. However, side effects may be more prominent than injection, including runny nose, headache and wheezing. It should not be given to people with a history of asthma.
While serious reactions, such as allergy or anaphylaxis, are rare they do occur. Do not get the vaccine if you have had a reaction in the past or if you have a severe allergic reaction to eggs. Signs of a severe reaction include hives, paleness, dizziness, difficulty breathing and racing heart rate. The number of severe reactions to the vaccine is far less than the number of severe infections that occur every year.
Here at Children’s Physicians Medical Group we believe that vaccination is safe and the best way to prevent infection. Our doctors offer the vaccine to children 6 months and up. For more information, and to determine which type of flu vaccine is best for your child, please contact your pediatrician or go to the CDC website www.flu.gov.
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Map Shows Vaccine Preventable Outbreaks
The Council on Foreign Relations released an interactive map in October 2011, and it gained a lot of attention earlier this week. The map is regularly updated and shows worldwide vaccine-preventable outbreaks from
2008-2014.
There are a few important things to note about the map. The
red dots represent measles, and it’s covered the United Kingdom and is showing
up in the United States as well. Mumps (dark green dots) are also completely
covering the United Kingdom, and showing up in the United States; both of these
are part of the MMR vaccine.
Whooping cough (bright green dots) has really only been a problem in the
United States, and there is quite a bit of it.
Michael Hiltzik of the Los Angeles Times wrote an article
about the map, and commented:
“The lesson of all this is that
vaccination is not an individual choice to be made by a parent for his or her
own offspring. It’s a public health issue, because the diseases contracted by
unvaccinated children are a threat to the community. That’s what public health
is all about, and an overly tolerant approach to non-medical exemptions – and
publicity given to anti-vaccination charlatans like Wakefield and McCarthy by
heedless promoters like, sadly, Katie Couric, affect us all.”
The map highlights the imperative need for parents to
vaccinate their children. All parents should consult their pediatrician when
making vaccination decisions that will impact public health.
Thursday, January 16, 2014
A Positive Spin on Vaccines
Negative stories about vaccines dominate the news, as
activist groups continue to spread misinformation. But, vaccines are important
to our health and safety, and many are speaking out about their positive
effects.
NASCAR driver Jeff Gordon joined the Sounds of Pertussis campaign with the March of Dimes and Sanofi Pasteur. The campaign is a national
education program educating adults about the importance of getting an adult
Tdap (tetanus, diptheria and acellular pertussis) vaccination. The booster
vaccine prevents adults from contracting pertussis and passing it along to
unvaccinated infants, who will receive the vaccine at two months of age.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
reported there were more than 41,000 cases and 18 deaths reported in 2012 for
pertussis, the largest outbreak in fifty years.
“Eighty percent of the time…these young infants are getting
it from family members so it’s really about prevention (efforts),” Gordon
states. “Prior to the baby being born, family members, when they come to the
hospital, when they come to the home to visit, you know they need to make sure
they’re protected.”
Gordon is not the only person speaking in favor of vaccines.
Jeanne Sager wrote an impassioned blog post for The Stir about the importance of vaccines. She asks parents to
also consider all of the diseases that vaccines prevent, rather than just
focusing on vaccine safety.
Sager references Amy Parker’s story on Voices for Vaccines.
Parker grew up un-vaccinated in a “health nut” family. Parker states:
As healthy as my lifestyle seemed, I
contracted measles, mumps, rubella, a type of viral meningitis, scarlatina,
whooping cough, yearly tonsillitis, and chickenpox, some of which are vaccine
preventable. In my twenties I got precancerous HPV and spent 6 months of my
life wondering how I was going to tell my two children under the age of 7 that
mummy might have cancer before it was safely removed...
If you’ve never had these illnesses
you don’t know how awful they are -- I do. Pain, discomfort, the inability to
breathe or to eat or to swallow, fever and nightmares, itching all over your
body so much that you can’t stand lying on bed sheets, losing so much weight
you can’t walk properly, diarrhea that leaves you lying prostrate on the
bathroom floor, the unpaid time off work for parents (and if you’re self
employed that means NO INCOME), the quarantine, missing school, missing
parties, the worry, the sleepless nights, the sweat, the tears and the blood,
the midnight visits to A
and E, sitting in a doctor’s waiting room on your own because no one will
sit near you because they’re rightfully scared of those spots all over your
kid's face.
Dr. Daniel Gilstrap of Durham, North Carolina notes that,
“The list of vaccines for adults has expanded quite a lot in the last few
years. Not only that, the knowledge of the safety of these vaccines has
increased.”
Vaccination efforts have enabled entire generations to grow
up without knowledge of the severity of
polio, measles, whooping cough, and
others. Gilstrap and other physicians are working to educate people on the
importance of vaccines because they don’t know how bad the diseases can be.
Finally, Lisa Murakami wrote a blog post last September,
Vaccination: A Layperson’s Perspective. Her post generated 482 comments and
tackles all of the vaccination myths. Her husband is a medical resident at Dana Farber.
She notes, “That means, he has 14.5 years of grueling
medical training that I don’t have. And – conservatively estimated – 28,160
hours. My father has infinitely more; he’s seen tens of thousands of patients
over the course of his forty-year career as a pediatrician. Clearly, I can’t
run a Google search on a complex medical topic and eventually cobble together a
better answer on it than these two can.”
Murakami concludes by noting that she can’t link to many of
the sources she used when debunking vaccine myths because you have to pay for a
subscription to major medical journals and other legitimate scientific sources.
She has subscriptions to these sources, but the average person does not. The
best information on vaccines isn’t available by Googling the Internet, however
the worst information is available.
Those with questions about vaccines should consult their
pediatrician. The Internet and other sources is not a substitute for years of
medical training, and the diseases are much worse than the vaccines.
Tuesday, January 7, 2014
Vaccines: Where are the facts?
Parents are barraged with a lot of anti-vaccine materials
through the Internet and media, and it’s hard to sort out what the facts are,
and which stories are myths and conspiracy theories.
“I think vaccines have become a scapegoat for our fears
about medicine, the government, and mistrust of authority,” Dr. Julia Getzelman
states. Her pediatric practice in San Francisco attracts vaccine skeptics, and
some of her patients follow an amended vaccine schedule in an effort to
increase vaccination.
A recent article in Forbes magazine supported Dr.
Getzelman’s statement. A study showed that climage change deniers, anti-GMO
activists and vaccine conspiracy theorists all overlap each other on a tendency
to believe in conspiracies.
Another study refutes this and showed that Americans
reluctance towards vaccines isn’t from a distrust of science or misinformation,
but from divisive forces that turn scientific findings into uninformed
politically charged controversies. Dan M. Kahan of Cultural Cognition Project
at Yale Law School argues: “The problem isn’t media sensationalism. Uninformed
and counterproductive risk communication is the inevitable byproduct of the
absence of a systematic, evidence-based alternative.”
For many spooked parents, data and studies don’t ease their fears. Instead, pediatricians like Dr. Jane Finlay in British Columbia are
using humor, validation and compromise to work with parents. Finlay can’t
acknowledge these parents beliefs as true, but she will work with them to adapt
the vaccine schedule because it is in the best interest of the child to get
their vaccinations.
According to Noni MacDonald, a professor of pediatrics at
Dalhousie University in Halifax, just spending 5 to 10 minutes on an
anti-vaccine website can influence a parent to opt out of vaccines. Doctors are
pushing for more regulation on websites that push anti-vaccine messages. The
Australian government is working to force the Australian Vaccine Network to run
a consumer-warning banner stating it has a misleading name.
“We all like to think we make our decisions based on
incredible evidence and we weigh it out. Well, we don’t. A lot of our decisions
are based on our beliefs at the unconscious and subconscious level,” MacDonald
states.
Finlay and MacDonald recommend that pediatricians work with
parents on a vaccine schedule, use a non-confrontational tone, hear parents
out, and not assume that all parents have the same concerns.
“They’re doing what they feel is honestly the best thing for
their child,” Finlay points out. She further recommends that pediatricians
combat Jenny McCarthy-style stories with compelling information on children
damaged or killed by vaccine-preventable diseases.
Lessley Anderson wrote a blog post about vaccine deniers for
the Verge in October, and focused on the San Francisco Waldorf School, where
only 35% of incoming kindergarteners are up to date on vaccinations. “But if I
decide not to vaccinate my kid, I make him a potential carrier. He may be able
to fight off measles, mumps, rubella, and other illnesses — but what if he
spreads a disease to somebody who, for whatever reason, isn’t so lucky?”
Vaccine Watch encourages parents with concerns about vaccines
to talk with their pediatrician and about their concerns. Vaccines are the best
invention of the twentieth century, and as recent outbreaks of measles and
other preventable diseases have shown, very necessary to public health.
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