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I read this too. I loved it. Your thoughts mirror my own.

I haven't seen anything yet on the IOM proceedings. I'm sure

they will have a summary of findings written up on it like last

time. I don't remember how long it took, though. Meanwhile

FEAT usually covers those things as soon as something surfaces.

I'll post it here as soon as I get something on it, while I watch

for other news.

Shirley

> The August issue of consumer reports has what I felt was a very

good article

> on the issue of vaccines / mercury entitled:

> " Vaccines - An issue of trust - Misinformation and government foot-

dragging

> are fanning fears. "

>

> Has anyone heard any results from the IOM proceedings in Cambridge

Mass.

> today? Perhaps they should have sat there and read consumer

reports!

>

> Joe Marciano

>

>

>

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  • 2 weeks later...
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Yep, it's on line now...thanks Joe..

http://www.consumerreports.org/main/detail.jsp?CONTENT%3C%3Ecnt_id=90511 & FOL

DER%3C%3Efolder_id=18151 & bmUID=996381637788

PART ONE of a two-part series

Vaccines:

An issue of trust

MISINFORMATION AND GOVERNMENT FOOT-DRAGGING ARE FANNING FEARS.

This is the season of the shots, when parents scramble for appointments to

bring their kids' immunizations up to date in time for school openings. The

annual ritual is becoming anything but routine for growing numbers of

parents who feel they're confronting a terrible dilemma: Do I expose my

child and community to the risk of a serious disease? Or do I expose my

child to the risk of one of those rare catastrophic reactions to the vaccine

itself--reactions that I keep reading about on the Internet?

Even for those who don't have small children or grandchildren, distrust of

the vaccine program--one of America's most successful public-health

initiatives--is cause for concern. It's contributing to a severe underuse of

the adult vaccines for flu and pneumonia and also to local outbreaks of

vaccine-preventable diseases.

A friend's doubts about vaccine safety worried Suzanne Walther of

Murfreesboro, Tenn., who decided to search the Internet for information. " I

just typed in the word 'vaccines' and everything that popped up was

antivaccine material, " says Walther, who decided as a result to postpone

immunization of her infant, .

She waited too long. On the eve of her first birthday,

contracted Haemophilus influenzae B (Hib) meningitis and landed in intensive

care. It was the first case the hospital had seen in eight years; Hib

meningitis has become rare since the 1987 introduction of a vaccine against

it. The disease had a significant chance of killing or disabling the baby;

fortunately, she recovered.

JUST A TINY PINCH Dr. Richel (above) of Mt. Kisco, N.Y., gives Carlie

Grave her polio and DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis) boosters. Vaccines

have spared Carlie and her friends at Quality Time Nursery School, Katonah,

N.Y. (top), the risk of 11 serious childhood diseases.

Photos by Randy Piland

Ninety percent of pediatricians and 60 percent of family doctors recently

surveyed by University of Michigan researchers said they cared for at least

one child whose parent refused immunization. A study in Colorado found that

unimmunized children were 22 times more likely to contract measles and 6

times more likely to contract pertussis (whooping cough) than vaccinated

children.

" In the middle are parents who are trying to do the right thing, " says Bruce

Gellin, M.D., a preventive-medicine specialist at Vanderbilt University and

executive director of the National Network for Immunization Information, an

independent source of scientifically verified vaccine information.

The small but influential antivaccine groups circulating the information

that Walther found are doing the nation both a disservice and a service.

Their best-known accusations--that too many vaccines " overwhelm " the immune

system and that the MMR vaccine against measles, mumps, and rubella causes

autism--appear groundless, according to the latest research.

But the noise-making has shaken up the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the two agencies

most concerned with vaccine safety.

Our examination of the vaccine-safety record has found that in some areas

this shake-up is long overdue:

There are significant gaps in the system for monitoring the safety of newly

introduced and older vaccines.

The guardians of vaccine safety have been slow to address correctable

problems, such as the use of mercury as a preservative in some infant

vaccines.

The adversarial treatment of the 150 or so Americans who apply each year for

compensation for adverse effects from vaccines has angered many and provided

recruits to the antivaccine forces.

In this report, we'll discuss where the vaccine-safety system has fallen

short and how it can be improved. We will examine the evidence behind the

main arguments of the antivaccination activists. And we will suggest ways in

which consumers can benefit from immunization while minimizing risks. In an

upcoming report this fall, we'll take a closer look at adult vaccines.

The price of success

Under the current schedule, children receive 23 shots against 11 diseases

before starting kindergarten. Before the vaccines were introduced, the toll

of 10 of these vaccine-preventable diseases--diphtheria, measles, mumps,

pertussis, polio, rubella (German measles), tetanus, hepatitis B,

pneumococcus, and Hib--was nearly 2 million reported cases of disease per

year, based on their peak year of incidence. Even the " mildest "

vaccine-preventable disease, chicken pox, claimed 100 lives each year.

But the youngest Americans who can remember diphtheria and whooping cough

are on Medicare. The youngest who can remember polio and measles are in

their 50s and 40s, respectively. Most parents making immunization decisions

today are in their 20s and 30s.

" We're prisoners of our own success, " observes Schaffner, M.D.,

chairman of the Department of Preventive Medicine at Vanderbilt University.

" When formerly dreaded diseases have been pushed into the shadows--or

eliminated--questions about the vaccines themselves spring up. "

The next decade is likely to bring new vaccines against HIV, genital herpes,

type 1 diabetes, Epstein-Barr virus, cervical cancer, and streptococcus A

and B, to name just a few under development. That will make oversight of the

benefits and risks of vaccines more crucial.

Improving the safety record of vaccines is no small task for several

reasons:

Since vaccines are given to healthy people, serious risks are unacceptable.

But what's " serious " ? If a vaccine prevents 1,000 deaths, are 10

vaccine-related injuries an acceptable trade-off? If you or your child is

one of the 10, the answer is probably no. If you are a public-health

official, the answer isn't so obvious.

Most childhood vaccines enjoy almost total protection from product-liability

lawsuits. While this has kept manufacturers in the vaccine business, it has

also removed one important incentive to improve safety beyond current

levels.

A CLOSE CALL Anti-vaccine arguments persuaded Suzanne Walther of

Murfreesboro, Tenn., to postpone vaccination for baby (in

striped romper). Just before her first birthday, the baby contracted a

serious case of vaccine-preventable Hib meningitis. Luckily, she recovered

fully.

How vaccines are tested

Most vaccines come to market with an incomplete safety record. A new vaccine

is typically tested on 10,000 to 20,000 people before the FDA approves it.

That's enough to study disease protection but not enough to reliably detect

rare complications. In 1998, the FDA licensed RotaShield, a vaccine to

prevent an intestinal infection that was striking an average of 3.5 million

babies in the U.S. a year and killing 20. Of the 10,054 babies vaccinated

during the tests, 5 developed a condition called intussusception, a

life-threatening collapse of the bowel. Since intussusception can also occur

spontaneously, it wasn't mathematically clear whether or not the vaccine

caused those cases.

But within six months of the vaccine's introduction, after some 1.5 million

babies had received it, monitoring studies found that vaccinated babies had

a 21-times higher chance of intussusception than normal within the first few

weeks after their shots. The vaccine is no longer in use.

The obvious way to catch such problems before marketing is to vaccinate more

test subjects. But the price of new vaccines is already high--a single dose

of the newest, a vaccine against childhood pneumococcal disease, costs

$58--and testing more subjects would drive costs still higher. Moreover,

it's hard to recruit enough volunteers even for the modest-sized trials.

" Everybody wants more babies studied, but whose babies are these going to

be? Your baby or somebody else's baby? " asks , M.D., a

Vanderbilt University pediatrics professor who has worked on many vaccine

research projects.

Once a vaccine goes on the market, the main way of tracking unexpected

complications is through a federal program called the Vaccine Adverse Event

Reporting System (VAERS). But this system has major drawbacks: It's

voluntary (except for manufacturers), and reports don't necessarily mean

that the adverse reaction is truly associated with the vaccination.

To compensate for these failings, the government also finances a smaller but

more complete program, the Vaccine Safety Datalink, that uses the

comprehensive records of several large managed care organizations to track

vaccine outcomes. Additional safety research programs are under development

as well.

Two safety lapses

In two recent cases, vaccine-safety agencies were slow to act on emerging

problems:

Mercury in vaccines. Even minuscule doses of mercury can impair the

cognitive development of babies and young children. Just this year, the FDA

warned pregnant and nursing women and very young children to avoid certain

mercury-containing fish. Yet until last year, the same agency permitted the

use of childhood vaccines containing mercury in quantities that many,

including Consumers Union, consider unsafe.

Mercury is a major constituent of thimerosal, a preservative that for the

past 70 years has been added to multidose vials of vaccines to inhibit

bacterial growth. There has never been a scientific study of the safety of

using this product in children's vaccines. Nevertheless, its use continued

until 1999, when the FDA added up vaccine-related thimerosal exposure for

the first time, as part of an agencywide study of mercury-containing

products.

At the time, three vaccines routinely given to newborns and infants,

hepatitis B, Hib, and DTP, contained thimerosal. An average-sized baby given

vaccines containing the maximum concentration of thimerosal was being

exposed to 187 micrograms of mercury, more than twice what the Environmental

Protection Agency deems safe for very young children. (Exposure didn't

exceed the much looser FDA guideline, which Consumers Union believes is too

high.)

Nevertheless, the FDA and CDC allowed immunizations with

thimerosal-containing vaccines to continue--while cooperating with

manufacturers to create thimerosal-free versions as quickly as possible. Not

until early in 2001, more than a year and a half after the issue first

surfaced, were all childhood vaccines made without significant amounts of

thimerosal.

Vaccine-associated polio. The oral polio vaccine in use from 1960 on had an

advantage over the original killed-virus Salk vaccine. The live, weakened

virus it contained replicated and spread from person to person, immunizing

many who were exposed to it even though they weren't vaccinated themselves.

This so-called herd immunity is why experts expect that polio will soon be

the second disease in history, after smallpox, to be eradicated from the

globe.

But the oral vaccine has a little-known downside: In about 1 in every 2.4

million doses, the ingested virus mutates back into a virulent form capable

of causing disease. Since 1979, the only cases of polio in the U.S. have

been caused by the oral vaccine. Yet not until 1999 did the CDC's vaccine

policy-making group vote to switch back to the injectable, inactivated

vaccine that cannot cause polio. During that 20-year period, there were

eight to nine cases of vaccine-associated paralytic polio each year.

" Why did it take 20 years to make the change? " says Salamone, a

Virginia parent whose 11-year-old son developed paralytic polio from his

second dose of oral vaccine. " It was an egregious act by the government. "

Some vaccine experts agree that the vaccine's safety should have been

considered sooner. " The decision could have been made 10 years earlier, "

says Neal Halsey, M.D., director of the Institute for Vaccine Safety at

s Hopkins University.

Salamone believes the turning point came when affected families appeared

before the CDC committee that sets immunization policy. " Until these doctors

saw these kids in wheelchairs, they never put faces on what they were

doing, " he says.

THE ANSWER MAN Walther credits Dr. Bruce Gellin of Vanderbilt University,

where was treated, for taking her concerns seriously and

finding answers to her questions. " I never felt like I was being blamed, "

Walther says. She is now an ardent supporter of childhood immunizations.

The antivaccine argument

This is not the only example of how vocal parents and antivaccine activists

have pushed government agencies to improve vaccine safety. In 1985 Barbara

Loe Fisher, a Washington, D.C., mother whose son developed neurological and

cognitive disorders after his pertussis vaccination, wrote " A Shot in the

Dark. " The book was a well-researched history and indictment of a vaccine

that even its supporters concede caused an unusual incidence of reactions,

from fever to seizures, because it was made from whole, killed

whooping-cough bacteria. Fisher went on to found the National Vaccine

Information Center, the most prominent of the antivaccine groups.

While Fisher's argument--that the pertussis vaccine caused an increase in

epileptic and learning-disabled children--appears baseless, her activism led

to the creation of a compensation system for vaccine victims and prompted

the CDC to plan a major expansion of programs to study vaccine safety.

Other arguments and suppositions of antivaccine activists, Fisher included,

are either incorrect or misleading. Here are the main ones:

Vaccines " overwhelm " the immune system and cause it to turn against itself.

Vaccines work by stimulating the production of protective antibodies. So the

idea that multiple vaccines can " overstress " the immune systems of infants

seems reasonable. It's behind the belief that the measles component of the

measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine has caused an epidemic of autism.

In fact, vaccines tax the immune system much less than natural diseases,

says Halsey. A natural infection can lead to the stimulation of as many as

25 to 50 separate immune responses. " When we give something like the Hib

vaccine, we're giving only two antigens, " says Halsey. " The immune system's

potential is enormous. It can respond to 10 million to 100 million

antigens. "

Vaccines are as dangerous as the diseases. The statistics can be misleading.

In 1999, nearly 12,000 vaccine " adverse events " --established or presumed,

and mostly mild--were reported to government health officials. That same

year, the diseases themselves caused only 6,777 cases of illness or injury.

But that does not mean that vaccines are a poor risk.

Except for polio, vaccine-preventable diseases are still around. The

Colorado study that documented an increased risk of measles and pertussis

among unvaccinated children also found that vaccine refusal puts the

community at risk, because vaccines don't " take " in everybody who gets them.

The researchers found more measles and whooping cough among vaccinated

children in schools with many unvaccinated children than in schools where

nearly all children had been vaccinated.

If someone gets sick soon after getting a vaccine, the shot is to blame.

This idea is at the root of the most contentious vaccine-safety issues: the

alleged links between vaccines and autism, brain damage, and multiple

sclerosis. Some antivaccine web sites feature accounts of lively toddlers

who, after receiving their MMR shot, turned into neurologically impaired

preschoolers.

But are vaccines really to blame? To date, two expert panels, one convened

by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the other by the National Academy

of Sciences, have studied the MMR vaccine and autism. They found that autism

cases did not increase along the same trend lines as increases in the

percentages of children who received the MMR vaccine. Both expert groups

have concluded that although more needs to be learned about autism--and

above all about the apparent increase in the numbers of autistic

children--the MMR vaccine is almost certainly not to blame.

For now, the most likely explanation for the seeming link is pure

coincidence. Many childhood neurological and developmental problems first

emerge at an age when children are getting vaccines frequently.

POLIO FROM VACCINE Salamone, now age 11, got polio from the oral

vaccine he received as a baby more than a decade after the last case of

" wild " polio in the U.S. His father, , spearheaded the successful effort

to force a switch back to the safer killed-virus injectable polio vaccine.

Photos by Cameron son

Compensating the injured

When the pertussis vaccine controversy surfaced in the U.S. in the

mid-1980s, vaccine manufacturers threatened to get out of the business

rather than risk ruinous lawsuits. (Today, there are only four major

childhood-vaccine manufacturers in the U.S.: Glaxo Kline, Aventis

Pasteur, Wyeth Lederle, and Merck & Company.)

As a result, the federal Vaccine Injury Compensation Program was created in

1988. Funded by a small tax on every lot of vaccine, it is in essence a

no-fault insurance plan against childhood-vaccine injuries.

The program set up a list of conditions such as vaccine-associated polio

that, based on scientific evidence, seem to be vaccine-related. Anyone with

a condition on the list is entitled to compensation for " pain and suffering "

and for ongoing medical expenses. The trade-off: giving up the right to sue

manufacturers and doctors.

" With respect to manufacturers and physicians, the system has been an

unqualified success, " says Meyers, a law professor who heads the

vaccine-injury law clinic at Washington University. " But it's been a

much more mixed record with respect to consumers. "

" It's very difficult to bring a claim under this program, " Meyers says. " The

government is very aggressive. If there are any technical loopholes, they

raise them. They fight everything to the bitter end. "

Even claimants who win compensation can run into trouble. " I have had to

fight to get my son two pairs of braces a year, to keep up with his growth, "

says Salamone, whose son contracted polio from the vaccine. " They said one

pair should be enough. They asked why he needed physical therapy once a

week. "

Vaccine-victim advocates say the program's accumulated $1.6 billion balance

is evidence of its lack of generosity. The government says the surplus is

the result of the development of ever-safer vaccines.

Recommendations

Consumers should ask for the safest vaccines. The whole-cell pertussis

vaccine, childhood vaccines containing thimerosal as a preservative, and the

oral polio vaccine may still be in the distribution system. Tell your doctor

not to use these vaccines.

Be sure to let the doctor know if the child has a fever, diarrhea, or other

significant medical symptom at the time of an immunization appointment. The

doctor may recommend postponing the immunization. If this occurs, it's

critical to promptly make up the missed vaccine doses. For additional

information, consult the CDC's Contraindications for Childhood Immunization

document, available on the Internet at

(www.cdc.gov/nip/recs/contraindications.pdf).

Ask the doctor which post-vaccination symptoms are normal--and which warrant

medical attention. Mild fever and fussiness are common consequences of

vaccine-induced immune reaction. But a high fever or seizure is out of the

ordinary.

Seek information from reliable sources such as the CDC (www.cdc.gov/nip),

the National Network for Immunization Information

(www.immunizationinfo.org), the Immunization Action Coalition

(www.immunize.org) and the Vaccine Education Center (www.vaccine.chop.edu).

Be aware that some groups with official-sounding names, such as the National

Vaccine Information Center and Parents Requesting Open Vaccine Education,

are actually antivaccine networks.

Policy-makers should continue--and adequately finance--improvements in

tracking and analyzing vaccine injuries. This includes expanding state

immunization registries (with proper privacy safeguards), which are

invaluable for researching safety concerns. Vaccine-safety guardians need to

keep faith with parents by taking prompt action when possible problems or

concerns surface.

The Vaccine Injury Compensation Program should use some of its burgeoning

surplus to become more user-friendly. And physicians and health educators

must deal fully and respectfully with the vaccine-safety concerns of

patients and parents. It's no longer enough to say, " Trust us, we're the

experts. "

.. Vaccination details

Forums

For complete Ratings and recommendations of appliances, cars & trucks,

electronic gear, and much more, subscribe for $24 per year or $3.95 per

month and have access to all of Consumer Reports Online.

Copyright © 2001 Consumers Union of U.S., Inc

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Guest guest

I only read part of this post and even that was more of my time than

it deserved.

Sincerely,

Kaye

> Yep, it's on line now...thanks Joe..

> http://www.consumerreports.org/main/detail.jsp?CONTENT%3C%

3Ecnt_id=90511 & FOL

> DER%3C%3Efolder_id=18151 & bmUID=996381637788

>

>

> PART ONE of a two-part series

>

>

> Vaccines:

> An issue of trust

>

>

> MISINFORMATION AND GOVERNMENT FOOT-DRAGGING ARE FANNING FEARS.

>

>

>

>

> This is the season of the shots, when parents scramble for

appointments to

> bring their kids' immunizations up to date in time for school

openings. The

> annual ritual is becoming anything but routine for growing numbers

of

> parents who feel they're confronting a terrible dilemma: Do I

expose my

> child and community to the risk of a serious disease? Or do I

expose my

> child to the risk of one of those rare catastrophic reactions to

the vaccine

> itself--reactions that I keep reading about on the Internet?

> Even for those who don't have small children or grandchildren,

distrust of

> the vaccine program--one of America's most successful public-health

> initiatives--is cause for concern. It's contributing to a severe

underuse of

> the adult vaccines for flu and pneumonia and also to local

outbreaks of

> vaccine-preventable diseases.

>

> A friend's doubts about vaccine safety worried Suzanne Walther of

> Murfreesboro, Tenn., who decided to search the Internet for

information. " I

> just typed in the word 'vaccines' and everything that popped up was

> antivaccine material, " says Walther, who decided as a result to

postpone

> immunization of her infant, .

>

> She waited too long. On the eve of her first birthday,

> contracted Haemophilus influenzae B (Hib) meningitis and landed in

intensive

> care. It was the first case the hospital had seen in eight years;

Hib

> meningitis has become rare since the 1987 introduction of a vaccine

against

> it. The disease had a significant chance of killing or disabling

the baby;

> fortunately, she recovered.

>

>

>

>

> JUST A TINY PINCH Dr. Richel (above) of Mt. Kisco, N.Y.,

gives Carlie

> Grave her polio and DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis) boosters.

Vaccines

> have spared Carlie and her friends at Quality Time Nursery School,

Katonah,

> N.Y. (top), the risk of 11 serious childhood diseases.

>

>

> Photos by Randy Piland

>

> Ninety percent of pediatricians and 60 percent of family doctors

recently

> surveyed by University of Michigan researchers said they cared for

at least

> one child whose parent refused immunization. A study in Colorado

found that

> unimmunized children were 22 times more likely to contract measles

and 6

> times more likely to contract pertussis (whooping cough) than

vaccinated

> children.

> " In the middle are parents who are trying to do the right thing, "

says Bruce

> Gellin, M.D., a preventive-medicine specialist at Vanderbilt

University and

> executive director of the National Network for Immunization

Information, an

> independent source of scientifically verified vaccine information.

>

> The small but influential antivaccine groups circulating the

information

> that Walther found are doing the nation both a disservice and a

service.

> Their best-known accusations--that too many vaccines " overwhelm "

the immune

> system and that the MMR vaccine against measles, mumps, and rubella

causes

> autism--appear groundless, according to the latest research.

>

> But the noise-making has shaken up the Food and Drug Administration

(FDA)

> and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the two

agencies

> most concerned with vaccine safety.

>

> Our examination of the vaccine-safety record has found that in some

areas

> this shake-up is long overdue:

>

> There are significant gaps in the system for monitoring the safety

of newly

> introduced and older vaccines.

>

> The guardians of vaccine safety have been slow to address

correctable

> problems, such as the use of mercury as a preservative in some

infant

> vaccines.

>

> The adversarial treatment of the 150 or so Americans who apply each

year for

> compensation for adverse effects from vaccines has angered many and

provided

> recruits to the antivaccine forces.

>

> In this report, we'll discuss where the vaccine-safety system has

fallen

> short and how it can be improved. We will examine the evidence

behind the

> main arguments of the antivaccination activists. And we will

suggest ways in

> which consumers can benefit from immunization while minimizing

risks. In an

> upcoming report this fall, we'll take a closer look at adult

vaccines.

>

>

> The price of success

>

> Under the current schedule, children receive 23 shots against 11

diseases

> before starting kindergarten. Before the vaccines were introduced,

the toll

> of 10 of these vaccine-preventable diseases--diphtheria, measles,

mumps,

> pertussis, polio, rubella (German measles), tetanus, hepatitis B,

> pneumococcus, and Hib--was nearly 2 million reported cases of

disease per

> year, based on their peak year of incidence. Even the " mildest "

> vaccine-preventable disease, chicken pox, claimed 100 lives each

year.

>

> But the youngest Americans who can remember diphtheria and whooping

cough

> are on Medicare. The youngest who can remember polio and measles

are in

> their 50s and 40s, respectively. Most parents making immunization

decisions

> today are in their 20s and 30s.

>

> " We're prisoners of our own success, " observes Schaffner,

M.D.,

> chairman of the Department of Preventive Medicine at Vanderbilt

University.

> " When formerly dreaded diseases have been pushed into the shadows--

or

> eliminated--questions about the vaccines themselves spring up. "

>

> The next decade is likely to bring new vaccines against HIV,

genital herpes,

> type 1 diabetes, Epstein-Barr virus, cervical cancer, and

streptococcus A

> and B, to name just a few under development. That will make

oversight of the

> benefits and risks of vaccines more crucial.

>

> Improving the safety record of vaccines is no small task for several

> reasons:

>

> Since vaccines are given to healthy people, serious risks are

unacceptable.

> But what's " serious " ? If a vaccine prevents 1,000 deaths, are 10

> vaccine-related injuries an acceptable trade-off? If you or your

child is

> one of the 10, the answer is probably no. If you are a public-health

> official, the answer isn't so obvious.

>

> Most childhood vaccines enjoy almost total protection from product-

liability

> lawsuits. While this has kept manufacturers in the vaccine

business, it has

> also removed one important incentive to improve safety beyond

current

> levels.

>

>

>

>

>

>

> A CLOSE CALL Anti-vaccine arguments persuaded Suzanne Walther of

> Murfreesboro, Tenn., to postpone vaccination for baby

(in

> striped romper). Just before her first birthday, the baby

contracted a

> serious case of vaccine-preventable Hib meningitis. Luckily, she

recovered

> fully.

>

> How vaccines are tested

> Most vaccines come to market with an incomplete safety record. A

new vaccine

> is typically tested on 10,000 to 20,000 people before the FDA

approves it.

> That's enough to study disease protection but not enough to

reliably detect

> rare complications. In 1998, the FDA licensed RotaShield, a vaccine

to

> prevent an intestinal infection that was striking an average of 3.5

million

> babies in the U.S. a year and killing 20. Of the 10,054 babies

vaccinated

> during the tests, 5 developed a condition called intussusception, a

> life-threatening collapse of the bowel. Since intussusception can

also occur

> spontaneously, it wasn't mathematically clear whether or not the

vaccine

> caused those cases.

>

> But within six months of the vaccine's introduction, after some 1.5

million

> babies had received it, monitoring studies found that vaccinated

babies had

> a 21-times higher chance of intussusception than normal within the

first few

> weeks after their shots. The vaccine is no longer in use.

>

> The obvious way to catch such problems before marketing is to

vaccinate more

> test subjects. But the price of new vaccines is already high--a

single dose

> of the newest, a vaccine against childhood pneumococcal disease,

costs

> $58--and testing more subjects would drive costs still higher.

Moreover,

> it's hard to recruit enough volunteers even for the modest-sized

trials.

> " Everybody wants more babies studied, but whose babies are these

going to

> be? Your baby or somebody else's baby? " asks , M.D.,

a

> Vanderbilt University pediatrics professor who has worked on many

vaccine

> research projects.

>

> Once a vaccine goes on the market, the main way of tracking

unexpected

> complications is through a federal program called the Vaccine

Adverse Event

> Reporting System (VAERS). But this system has major drawbacks: It's

> voluntary (except for manufacturers), and reports don't necessarily

mean

> that the adverse reaction is truly associated with the vaccination.

>

> To compensate for these failings, the government also finances a

smaller but

> more complete program, the Vaccine Safety Datalink, that uses the

> comprehensive records of several large managed care organizations

to track

> vaccine outcomes. Additional safety research programs are under

development

> as well.

>

>

> Two safety lapses

>

> In two recent cases, vaccine-safety agencies were slow to act on

emerging

> problems:

>

> Mercury in vaccines. Even minuscule doses of mercury can impair the

> cognitive development of babies and young children. Just this year,

the FDA

> warned pregnant and nursing women and very young children to avoid

certain

> mercury-containing fish. Yet until last year, the same agency

permitted the

> use of childhood vaccines containing mercury in quantities that

many,

> including Consumers Union, consider unsafe.

>

> Mercury is a major constituent of thimerosal, a preservative that

for the

> past 70 years has been added to multidose vials of vaccines to

inhibit

> bacterial growth. There has never been a scientific study of the

safety of

> using this product in children's vaccines. Nevertheless, its use

continued

> until 1999, when the FDA added up vaccine-related thimerosal

exposure for

> the first time, as part of an agencywide study of mercury-containing

> products.

>

> At the time, three vaccines routinely given to newborns and infants,

> hepatitis B, Hib, and DTP, contained thimerosal. An average-sized

baby given

> vaccines containing the maximum concentration of thimerosal was

being

> exposed to 187 micrograms of mercury, more than twice what the

Environmental

> Protection Agency deems safe for very young children. (Exposure

didn't

> exceed the much looser FDA guideline, which Consumers Union

believes is too

> high.)

>

> Nevertheless, the FDA and CDC allowed immunizations with

> thimerosal-containing vaccines to continue--while cooperating with

> manufacturers to create thimerosal-free versions as quickly as

possible. Not

> until early in 2001, more than a year and a half after the issue

first

> surfaced, were all childhood vaccines made without significant

amounts of

> thimerosal.

>

> Vaccine-associated polio. The oral polio vaccine in use from 1960

on had an

> advantage over the original killed-virus Salk vaccine. The live,

weakened

> virus it contained replicated and spread from person to person,

immunizing

> many who were exposed to it even though they weren't vaccinated

themselves.

> This so-called herd immunity is why experts expect that polio will

soon be

> the second disease in history, after smallpox, to be eradicated

from the

> globe.

>

> But the oral vaccine has a little-known downside: In about 1 in

every 2.4

> million doses, the ingested virus mutates back into a virulent form

capable

> of causing disease. Since 1979, the only cases of polio in the U.S.

have

> been caused by the oral vaccine. Yet not until 1999 did the CDC's

vaccine

> policy-making group vote to switch back to the injectable,

inactivated

> vaccine that cannot cause polio. During that 20-year period, there

were

> eight to nine cases of vaccine-associated paralytic polio each year.

>

> " Why did it take 20 years to make the change? " says Salamone, a

> Virginia parent whose 11-year-old son developed paralytic polio

from his

> second dose of oral vaccine. " It was an egregious act by the

government. "

>

> Some vaccine experts agree that the vaccine's safety should have

been

> considered sooner. " The decision could have been made 10 years

earlier, "

> says Neal Halsey, M.D., director of the Institute for Vaccine

Safety at

> s Hopkins University.

>

> Salamone believes the turning point came when affected families

appeared

> before the CDC committee that sets immunization policy. " Until

these doctors

> saw these kids in wheelchairs, they never put faces on what they

were

> doing, " he says.

>

>

>

>

>

>

> THE ANSWER MAN Walther credits Dr. Bruce Gellin of Vanderbilt

University,

> where was treated, for taking her concerns seriously

and

> finding answers to her questions. " I never felt like I was being

blamed, "

> Walther says. She is now an ardent supporter of childhood

immunizations.

>

>

> The antivaccine argument

> This is not the only example of how vocal parents and antivaccine

activists

> have pushed government agencies to improve vaccine safety. In 1985

Barbara

> Loe Fisher, a Washington, D.C., mother whose son developed

neurological and

> cognitive disorders after his pertussis vaccination, wrote " A Shot

in the

> Dark. " The book was a well-researched history and indictment of a

vaccine

> that even its supporters concede caused an unusual incidence of

reactions,

> from fever to seizures, because it was made from whole, killed

> whooping-cough bacteria. Fisher went on to found the National

Vaccine

> Information Center, the most prominent of the antivaccine groups.

>

> While Fisher's argument--that the pertussis vaccine caused an

increase in

> epileptic and learning-disabled children--appears baseless, her

activism led

> to the creation of a compensation system for vaccine victims and

prompted

> the CDC to plan a major expansion of programs to study vaccine

safety.

>

> Other arguments and suppositions of antivaccine activists, Fisher

included,

> are either incorrect or misleading. Here are the main ones:

>

> Vaccines " overwhelm " the immune system and cause it to turn against

itself.

> Vaccines work by stimulating the production of protective

antibodies. So the

> idea that multiple vaccines can " overstress " the immune systems of

infants

> seems reasonable. It's behind the belief that the measles component

of the

> measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine has caused an epidemic of

autism.

>

> In fact, vaccines tax the immune system much less than natural

diseases,

> says Halsey. A natural infection can lead to the stimulation of as

many as

> 25 to 50 separate immune responses. " When we give something like

the Hib

> vaccine, we're giving only two antigens, " says Halsey. " The immune

system's

> potential is enormous. It can respond to 10 million to 100 million

> antigens. "

>

> Vaccines are as dangerous as the diseases. The statistics can be

misleading.

> In 1999, nearly 12,000 vaccine " adverse events " --established or

presumed,

> and mostly mild--were reported to government health officials. That

same

> year, the diseases themselves caused only 6,777 cases of illness or

injury.

> But that does not mean that vaccines are a poor risk.

>

> Except for polio, vaccine-preventable diseases are still around. The

> Colorado study that documented an increased risk of measles and

pertussis

> among unvaccinated children also found that vaccine refusal puts the

> community at risk, because vaccines don't " take " in everybody who

gets them.

> The researchers found more measles and whooping cough among

vaccinated

> children in schools with many unvaccinated children than in schools

where

> nearly all children had been vaccinated.

>

> If someone gets sick soon after getting a vaccine, the shot is to

blame.

> This idea is at the root of the most contentious vaccine-safety

issues: the

> alleged links between vaccines and autism, brain damage, and

multiple

> sclerosis. Some antivaccine web sites feature accounts of lively

toddlers

> who, after receiving their MMR shot, turned into neurologically

impaired

> preschoolers.

>

> But are vaccines really to blame? To date, two expert panels, one

convened

> by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the other by the National

Academy

> of Sciences, have studied the MMR vaccine and autism. They found

that autism

> cases did not increase along the same trend lines as increases in

the

> percentages of children who received the MMR vaccine. Both expert

groups

> have concluded that although more needs to be learned about autism--

and

> above all about the apparent increase in the numbers of autistic

> children--the MMR vaccine is almost certainly not to blame.

>

> For now, the most likely explanation for the seeming link is pure

> coincidence. Many childhood neurological and developmental problems

first

> emerge at an age when children are getting vaccines frequently.

>

>

>

>

>

>

> POLIO FROM VACCINE Salamone, now age 11, got polio from the

oral

> vaccine he received as a baby more than a decade after the last

case of

> " wild " polio in the U.S. His father, , spearheaded the

successful effort

> to force a switch back to the safer killed-virus injectable polio

vaccine.

>

>

> Photos by Cameron son

>

>

> Compensating the injured

> When the pertussis vaccine controversy surfaced in the U.S. in the

> mid-1980s, vaccine manufacturers threatened to get out of the

business

> rather than risk ruinous lawsuits. (Today, there are only four major

> childhood-vaccine manufacturers in the U.S.: Glaxo Kline,

Aventis

> Pasteur, Wyeth Lederle, and Merck & Company.)

>

> As a result, the federal Vaccine Injury Compensation Program was

created in

> 1988. Funded by a small tax on every lot of vaccine, it is in

essence a

> no-fault insurance plan against childhood-vaccine injuries.

>

> The program set up a list of conditions such as vaccine-associated

polio

> that, based on scientific evidence, seem to be vaccine-related.

Anyone with

> a condition on the list is entitled to compensation for " pain and

suffering "

> and for ongoing medical expenses. The trade-off: giving up the

right to sue

> manufacturers and doctors.

>

> " With respect to manufacturers and physicians, the system has been

an

> unqualified success, " says Meyers, a law professor who heads

the

> vaccine-injury law clinic at Washington University. " But

it's been a

> much more mixed record with respect to consumers. "

>

> " It's very difficult to bring a claim under this program, " Meyers

says. " The

> government is very aggressive. If there are any technical

loopholes, they

> raise them. They fight everything to the bitter end. "

>

> Even claimants who win compensation can run into trouble. " I have

had to

> fight to get my son two pairs of braces a year, to keep up with his

growth, "

> says Salamone, whose son contracted polio from the vaccine. " They

said one

> pair should be enough. They asked why he needed physical therapy

once a

> week. "

>

> Vaccine-victim advocates say the program's accumulated $1.6 billion

balance

> is evidence of its lack of generosity. The government says the

surplus is

> the result of the development of ever-safer vaccines.

>

>

> Recommendations

>

> Consumers should ask for the safest vaccines. The whole-cell

pertussis

> vaccine, childhood vaccines containing thimerosal as a

preservative, and the

> oral polio vaccine may still be in the distribution system. Tell

your doctor

> not to use these vaccines.

>

> Be sure to let the doctor know if the child has a fever, diarrhea,

or other

> significant medical symptom at the time of an immunization

appointment. The

> doctor may recommend postponing the immunization. If this occurs,

it's

> critical to promptly make up the missed vaccine doses. For

additional

> information, consult the CDC's Contraindications for Childhood

Immunization

> document, available on the Internet at

> (www.cdc.gov/nip/recs/contraindications.pdf).

>

> Ask the doctor which post-vaccination symptoms are normal--and

which warrant

> medical attention. Mild fever and fussiness are common consequences

of

> vaccine-induced immune reaction. But a high fever or seizure is out

of the

> ordinary.

>

> Seek information from reliable sources such as the CDC

(www.cdc.gov/nip),

> the National Network for Immunization Information

> (www.immunizationinfo.org), the Immunization Action Coalition

> (www.immunize.org) and the Vaccine Education Center

(www.vaccine.chop.edu).

> Be aware that some groups with official-sounding names, such as the

National

> Vaccine Information Center and Parents Requesting Open Vaccine

Education,

> are actually antivaccine networks.

>

> Policy-makers should continue--and adequately finance--improvements

in

> tracking and analyzing vaccine injuries. This includes expanding

state

> immunization registries (with proper privacy safeguards), which are

> invaluable for researching safety concerns. Vaccine-safety

guardians need to

> keep faith with parents by taking prompt action when possible

problems or

> concerns surface.

>

> The Vaccine Injury Compensation Program should use some of its

burgeoning

> surplus to become more user-friendly. And physicians and health

educators

> must deal fully and respectfully with the vaccine-safety concerns of

> patients and parents. It's no longer enough to say, " Trust us,

we're the

> experts. "

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> . Vaccination details

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Forums

>

>

>

> For complete Ratings and recommendations of appliances, cars &

trucks,

> electronic gear, and much more, subscribe for $24 per year or $3.95

per

> month and have access to all of Consumer Reports Online.

>

> Copyright © 2001 Consumers Union of U.S., Inc

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