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Vanderbilt bows out of vaccinations
Vaccination 'could pose
danger to patients with weak immune systems'
By Meredith Berger
February 04, 2003
For some emergency caregivers
at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center, the only thing that stands
between them and vaccination against smallpox is a set of words: the
Hippocratic Oath, to be precise.
The hospital's medical board recently ruled against vaccinating some of
the facility's first-response emergency personnel, citing the promise every
physician makes not to cause harm when practicing, according to Dr. William
Schaffner, chair of the Department of Preventative Medicine.
The decision comes after Vanderbilt health officials determined the
vaccination could pose danger to patients with weak immune systems, who
could contract the small amount of the smallpox virus administered in a
smallpox vaccination from a medical caregiver.
"As smallpox is not an immediate threat, the board has taken the position
of the boy scouts and girl scouts of the medical community and be on the
lookout," Schaffner said. "Right now the risk is very low, but if we needed
it, we could get the vaccination in a pinch."
The World Health Organization declared smallpox eradicated in 1979.
Currently, the 50 state health departments have control of the stockpile
of vaccinations. The vaccination, if needed, could be delivered within 12
hours time, according to Schaffner. There is a three-day window between
exposure and infection in which a person can be effectively vaccinated
against smallpox, he said.
Schaffner explained that there was a three-pronged influence on the board
members' decision.
The primary concern when choosing not to vaccinate was the danger of
putting hospital patients with compromised immune systems in jeopardy.
"With the way that the smallpox vaccine works, someone who is vaccinated
might inadvertently transfer the disease to someone (who has a weakened
immune system), and the damage could be very substantial," Schaffner said.
The smallpox vaccination is a live virus that is injected into the arm
and, by the nature of the disease, is highly capably of being transmitted
accidentally from the vaccinated person to another person.
Additionally, board members did not perceive the smallpox admonition as a
viable threat. After conferring with Dr. Julie Gerberding, the director of
the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, and Health and Human Services
Secretary Tommy Thompson, members acceded that the threat of bio-terrorism
and the utilization of smallpox as the agent of that attack is low.
Schaffner said that members of the medical board are comfortable with the
12-hour time span in which they can receive the vaccine, should they need
it.
Smallpox, for a majority of its existence, has enjoyed a unique epithet
in the world of diseases.
"Smallpox has been somewhat of an anomaly in terms of being able to
prevent high mortality rates," said associate history professor Arleen
Tuchman, who teaches an undergraduate course, "The History of Medicine."
Tuchman noted that once the vaccination was introduced at the end of the
18th century, community members were split on whether they would want to
brave the disease or incur the risks of immunization.
"Still today, everyone is evaluating the risks differently," Tuchman
said.
This fact is true with the VUMC.
In an initiative independent of the VUMC Medical Board's decision-making
process, staff started alerting members of the hospital's emergency and
intensive care units that they were the targeted members of the CDC's
voluntary vaccination program. Upwards of 250 medical workers indicated
interest in participating, officials said.
But Schaffner said only 20 or so individuals were interested in
participating.
Shortly thereafter, the board made its decision and the volunteers were
notified.
One test-run that was completed was the volunteer vaccination that
involved approximately 300 students.
According to Schaffner, there were "no serious adverse reactions" from
the group; however, about one-third of the volunteers reported feeling under
par and subsequently had to take days off of work or school.

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