Measles, Mumps, Rubella... Forgotten but NOT Gone

There is no decision more personal than whether or not to immunize one's children. Information regarding the safety and effectiveness of today's vaccines is readily available but is overshadowed by opinion and hyperbole offered up by celebrities and others. In light of significant recent outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases all over North America, it's a good idea to explore the issues. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

To immunize or not to immunize... that is the question. When I was growing up, there really wasn't any controversy - when we were in certain grades, we were all lined up at school and the public health nurse either gave us a shot in the arm or a little pink drop of sugary liquid on a plastic spoon. I have a nice, circular scar on each of my upper arms just below my shoulders that signify my immunization against smallpox, the only disease to have been declared eradicated from the Earth. When my children were small they each were given their shots according to the vaccination schedule of the time. It's what we did. Then came Andrew Wakefield.

The study published by Mr Wakefield purported to link immunizations with the development of autism and it set the world on its ear. The fact that this study has been debunked scientifically a number of times seems not to penetrate the consciousness of a growing group of parents who feel that herd immunity will protect their children. The principle of herd immunity is simple: if enough of a herd of any species is immune to a microbe the odds of an outbreak of that microbial disease are extremely low. And should an outbreak occur, it rapidly diminishes as the number of susceptible hosts drops. Well, guess what... the herd isn't immune any more.

Outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases like measles, mumps, rubella, pertussis and varicella have been documented all over complacent North America. Combined with a falling immunization rate, high-speed intercontinental travel allows these diseases to gain a toehold and then they are free to run rampant through populations with low or NO herd immunity. Communicability begins before the infected host becomes symptomatic, so spread is difficult to contain once it begins. Measles had been declared eliminated in the Americas in 2002, with small sporadic outbreaks annually; there were 85 cases on the continent in 2005 and as many as 253 in 2010. But in 2011, the WHO American region reported the highest number of cases seen since the disease was reported eliminated. My city has just recorded its second measles case in as many weeks after years of zero cases and we've had two infants with congenital rubella admitted to our PICU in recent months.

"So what's the big deal?" people say. Health care has changed since the 50s and 60s, and kids don't die of vaccine-preventable diseases any more. Right? Wrong. Children and adults DO die of these diseases, although the number is small and complication rates remain manageable. For now, at least. Even so, people still believe that it's all hype and not really anything to worry about. They forget about the children and adults who are unable to be immunized, not for lack of wanting it but because of other health issues. Children with cancer, blood dyscrasias, organ transplants and certain neurological disorders cannot be immunized against certain diseases. Adults who have been inadequately immunized as children for whatever reason are also at risk. And it's this population who are at risk for dying from chicken pox. Or measles. Or to become sterile from the mumps. Or to have a baby with severe anomalies from congenital rubella. It's not a joke.

In the course of researching my family tree I have come across entire families wiped out by pertussis and measles, and others by typhus, cholera, or scarlet fever (infections that while not vaccine preventable, have been essentially eradicated by modern-day antibiotics and sanitation practices). I'm always deeply saddened when I find them, and I fear that if the current complacency and disdain for immunization continue we may find ourselves right back there.

As pediatric nurses we have a unique opportunity to help make this better. We have many teachable moments in the course of our workday where we could reinforce the message that not only are vaccinations safe and effective, but also that parents aren't only protecting their own children, they're protecting those they encounter out in the world who aren't lucky enough to be able to protect themselves. We can remind them that no one knows what the future might bring and that someday they may find themselves with a child who can't be immunized. I remember a family that had 5 children. None of them were immunized because the mom was opposed. Their fourth child became critically ill and needed a heart transplant. The discussions with this mother were intense and, on some level vaguely threatening when it was pointed out that the child would surely die if one of the siblings brought home a vaccine-preventable disease after going through a transplant. She asked for some time to research things and in the end agreed to have all of her children immunized.

My challenge to you is to examine your own thoughts and feelings about vaccinations from a scientific rather than an emotional perspective. Then I challenge you to formulate your responses to parents who are on the fence about having their children immunized so you have them ready when the opportunity arises. Our future is counting on you.

I am a pre nursing student and also a parent who does not vax. I am not debating the topic because I know that people like myself are looked down upon here.

Only insofar as it is a reflection of ineffective research and unsupported critical thinking abilities. The nursing flirtations with voo-doo interventions such as "therapuetic touch" not withstanding, we base nursing practice on empiral studies that have been replicated and peer reviewed. Frankly, there is fifteen times the evidence of the efficacy of leeches as there is to refusal to vaccinate.

"We are constantly researching and are open to the idea of vax...."

Do you have a degree in a hard science and at least one class in statistics that makes your interpretation of the actual data valid?

I would be more than happy to review your research if you provide the links!

Again, I am not going to debate the issue as my husband and I are confident in our decision. I just wanted to clear up that for many an autism link has nothing to do with it and neither do non vaccinating celebrities.

Specializes in Adult Internal Medicine.
Again, I am not going to debate the issue as my husband and I are confident in our decision. I just wanted to clear up that for many an autism link has nothing to do with it and neither do non vaccinating celebrities.

Don't debate the issue if you don't wish to, but please share the study that leads to your confidence in the decision so we can all read it.

It wasn't one specific study. It was a culmination of info gathered over the years. My kids are 10, 5, 3, and 1. We have been researching this for over a decade.

Specializes in Adult Internal Medicine.
It wasn't one specific study. It was a culmination of info gathered over the years. My kids are 10, 5, 3, and 1. We have been researching this for over a decade.

Can you cite/post some of the evidence?

Again I won't debate the issue with you, but as you posted that you are well researched and confident in the decision, I am using this as a chance to better understand the motivations of those that don't vaccinate, as I typically assume that they don't have any solid research under their belt.

Honestly, I don't have any links because we didn't keep them. When we first started, our son got all his vaccinations. After a few years, we became increasingly uneasy about the ingredients and stopped. We received that info from the cdc website.

I won't be posting anymore. I said what I wanted to say. I didn't post to try to change anyone's mind or to talk about how we made our decision. I just didn't like that the prevalent stereotype was that we are uneducated, celebrity stalkers who only do it because of autism. This is not an issue my husband and I took lightly. We are very well educated people who care deeply for our children and want them to be the healthiest they can be. Just like parents who vax.

Specializes in ICU, LTACH, Internal Medicine.

Some folks just don't believe anything till they see it in front of their own face, whether they know as little as pre-nursing student or as much as someone with PhD in statistics. I saw people like that turning 180 degrees during one short night and becoming staunch pro-vaxxers from die-hard opposers... the only problem was that the price of this change, which was the life of a human being. The life of their own child barely hanging there, being exact.

My own mom is now one of them. It gives her some sort of peace, although it can't change anything in the life of her child, debilitated for life by one preventable disease, and in the life of her siblings who died from another such disease.

I would just like to point out the history behind autism and vaccinations.

Dr. Andrew Wakefield was trying to get rid of the whole 3 dose vaccine, and push his whole single vaccine "recommended course of injections."

Since the whole thing began, 16+ years ago, no one has been able to reproduce his results.

He was pursing a patent for a single measles vaccine before he began his campaign against the MMR vaccine.

In fact, this very doctor who was against the MMR vaccine is still PRO-vaccine.

The reason that autism rates appear to be going up is because the diagnosing standards have changed over the years. They have become broader. We are starting to notice it more. It was not included in the DSM until the 1960s, before hand it was labeled as different things, such as childhood schizophrenia. Even then, the requirements only were 6 bullets long.

It is important to recognize ALL factors when looking at these rates and the studies being conducted.

Who is sponsoring them?

Who are the doctors performing them?

There is a huge bias and people do have agenda's.

In the end, you can only look at hard facts.

But maybe I am wrong. I haven't read ALL the articles and studies out there.

Let them learn the other way. It is very difficult to force these parents. Let them realize how important is vaccination nowadays.

Specializes in Adult Internal Medicine.
Honestly, I don't have any links because we didn't keep them. When we first started, our son got all his vaccinations. After a few years, we became increasingly uneasy about the ingredients and stopped. We received that info from the cdc website.

I won't be posting anymore. I said what I wanted to say. I didn't post to try to change anyone's mind or to talk about how we made our decision. I just didn't like that the prevalent stereotype was that we are uneducated, celebrity stalkers who only do it because of autism. This is not an issue my husband and I took lightly. We are very well educated people who care deeply for our children and want them to be the healthiest they can be. Just like parents who vax.

Branb,

In all honesty, this is exactly how the stereotype becomes prevalent. You posted that you are well educated and well researched and confident in your decision not to vaccinate your children, yet you can not cite any research or evidence for you decision. You haven't "kept" the links? Have you continued to research the issue, evaluated the new data? Medical professionals are constantly reevaluating their practice.

I don't doubt you care deeply about your children; I think most parents do. I don't think caring for a child replaces medical knowledge and research.

I have printed articles, books with a ton of marked pages, and journals in my study. I didn't keep any direct links to the things we found online. I am not going to go through and get them because like I have said several times I am not here to debate this. I know it is pointless. I just wanted to say that the things that you are calling all the parents stupid for are not even what they base their decision on.

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I continually research. I don't lee links online because I print out anything I find interesting to come back to it later. I haven't read anything particularly compelling lately.

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