It is absolutely true - what parents don't know about vaccinations can hurt
their children. But what is needed is not for pediatricians to do a better job
convincing parents that the benefits of vaccination always outweigh the risks.
There are too many parents who know first hand that, when it happens to your
child, the risks are 100 percent. What is needed is better educated doctors who
know the facts about vaccines and can truthfully answer parents questions rather
than just spin better and tell them what to do.
The facts about what your doctor does and does not know about vaccines will
be presented at the Third International Public Conference on Vaccination
sponsored by the National Vaccine Information Center Nov. 7-9, 2002 at the
Crystal Gateway Marriott Hotel in Arlington, Virginia just minutes from Reagan
National Airport and Washington, D.C. Come and hear experts talk
about:
o the relationship between MMR vaccine, mercury in vaccines, genetics and the
use of multiple vaccines on the dramatic increases in autism in every state;
o smallpox and smallpox vaccine risks and how public health officials and
state militias will treat you and your family under new state public health laws
if you choose not to get vaccinated;
o new data that anthrax vaccination can cause chronic illness;
o the argument for a causal association between human cancers and polio
vaccines contaminated with monkey viruses;
o the relationship between vaccination and allergic disease, such as asthma;
o why OspA Lyme vaccine can cause autoimmunity;
o how cutting edge complementary and integrative therapies can identify
and lessen the suffering of individuals with vaccine-induced brain and immune
system dysfunction;
o how genetic factors can increase the risk for vaccine reactions;
o conflicts of interest and human rights abuses in clinical trials;
o how technology and new federal regulations are destroying medical privacy
and informed consent rights;
o the threat to religious exemption to vaccination;
o the argument for the human right to informed consent to any medical
intervention which carries a risk of injury or death, including vaccination;
Go to NVIC's website at
www.909shot.com
or call 770-977-7991 to get more information about speakers and to register. Low
hotel rate of $109 now guaranteed.
What Parents Don't Know About Vaccinations Can Hurt
Wed Oct 23,11:52 PM ET
By Holly VanScoy
HealthScoutNews Reporter
WEDNESDAY, Oct. 23 (HealthScoutNews) -- Smallpox, diphtheria, whooping cough
and measles can be extremely dangerous to children's health.
But so can parents' misconceptions about the vaccines that prevent these
devastating illnesses, according to two of the U.S.'s preeminent immunization
specialists.
Speaking at the American Academy of Pediatrics' National Conference and
Exhibition in Boston this week, Dr. Bruce Gellin and Dr. Edgar Marcuse
encouraged pediatricians and other medical personnel to tackle these parental
misconceptions head on.
Doctors and nurses need to have a better understanding of exactly what
aspects of vaccination parents are concerned about, especially if the concerns
lead them to avoid having their children immunized, the doctors say.
Gellin is executive director of the National Network for Immunization (NNii).
Marcuse is a professor of pediatrics and adjunct professor of epidemiology at
the University of Washington, and a member of the NNii Steering Committee.
The best way to assess parental concerns is by acknowledging the complexities
of the immunization issue with parents and engaging them in conversations that
focus exactly on what they are most concerned about, the doctors say.
"The topic of childhood vaccinations is complex," Gellin says. "There are
issues about how many vaccines a child needs, when they are needed and how often
they are administered, how much vaccines cost and how they actually work."
"It is impossible for a physician to know which of these is of greatest
concern to parents without involving them in a dialogue that teases out an
individual parent's specific questions and concerns and provides appropriate,
accurate responses," he adds.
Such a dialogue can be difficult one, Gellin notes, in part because of larger
issues such as vaccine supply, vaccine safety and the sheer number of vaccines
that parents and pediatricians have to keep straight.
Furthermore, parents often have access to a dizzying amount of information
about immunizations from other sources -- including television, newspapers,
friends and the Internet -- some of which may be conflicting or misleading, he
says.
"Although there's lots of information available, most parents have few ways
of sorting out which of it is valid," Gellin says. "That is why we believe
in-depth conversations with pediatricians and other trained medical personnel
are essential, as well as why we strongly recommend that such conversations
revolve around exactly what a parent wants to know or is most confused or
concerned about. Especially if the confusion or concern would keep them from
having their children vaccinated."
Gellin points out that such conversations can badly miss their mark if
pediatricians don't base them on an individual parent's concerns. That's why the
presentation focused on "engaged dialogue," as opposed to encouraging doctors to
simply lecture parents or provide them with printed information on the benefits
of vaccines or how vaccines protect against infections.
"If someone asks the time, they usually don't want or need a lecture on how a
clock works," Gellin says. "It's the same with providing parents with
information they need to know and can use about childhood vaccination. It's
important for medical personnel to find what parents want to know or are
confused about, then give them just that specific information during a
discussion of their concerns. Otherwise, they will have a difficult time sorting
out good, quality information from all the hearsay or rumors they are exposed to
on this topic."
Gellin adds that pediatricians and other health-care providers who work with
the parents of young children should increasingly initiate childhood vaccine
discussions, rather than wait for parents to ask.
The pair's presentation included excerpts from a 1999 NNii study that
highlighted the dangers associated with falling rates of childhood immunization,
including the likelihood that many of the once-dreaded diseases presently under
control could re-emerge if too few children are vaccinated. Among the study's
conclusions: A parent's decision not to immunize a child places not only that
child but also all other children in a community at greater risk of infectious
disease.
Dr. Gilbert Ross, medical director of the American Council of Science and
Health, says vaccines have had a greater impact on protecting children from
death and illness from infectious diseases than any other public health
intervention.
"The benefits of childhood vaccination are more evident today than at any
time in the past half century," Ross says. "And evidence shows that vaccines are
likely to provide even greater benefits to public health and children's health
in the future."
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News@909shot.com is a free service of the National Vaccine Information Center
and is supported through membership donations. Learn more about vaccines,
diseases and how to protect your informed
ALL INFORMATION, DATA, AND
MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR GENERAL INFORMATION
PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS
OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR
LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND
COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH
YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"