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.

Specializes in School Nursing, Public Health Nurse.

I'm pretty sure no one has said vaccines are 100% safe. Anyone who does needs to check their facts. Medications aren't 100% safe either. Antibiotics and birth control are big ones with serious adverse reactions. ANY vaccine or medication can cause side effects in anyone. A good friend of mine died from a blood clot related to her birth control. She isn't a smoker or did not have high blood pressure or any of the other high risk issues.

Here is actual data on Vaccine compensation with # of cases filled, compensated, and dismissed per vaccine type from 1988-2014. Summary: 3,562 compensated and 9,755 dismissed. Then there is an awesome chart on doses administered from 2006 to present and number of cases filled, dismissed, and compensated for comparison. Total distributed doses: 1,968,399,297; total compensated: 1,328; total dismissed: 1,074. This means since 2006 0.0000000674% of doses administered got some form of compensation from 2006-2014.

http://www.hrsa.gov/vaccinecompensation/statisticsreport.pdf

As for the court cases with autism, the COURT determined there was a link. There is still no SCIENTIFIC proof there is a link. Furthermore the parents argued that the vaccine caused "encephalopathy....in the form of asthma and ASD" and the court agreed. And assuming that all 1,328 children above developed autism from the 1 billion doses administered it still doesn't explain the increase in ASD.

CDC | Data and Statistics | Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) | NCBDDD

Vaccines and Autism: A Tale of Shifting Hypotheses

Specializes in Eventually Midwifery.

As for the court cases with autism, the COURT determined there was a link. There is still no SCIENTIFIC proof there is a link. Furthermore the parents argued that the vaccine caused "encephalopathy....in the form of asthma and ASD" and the court agreed. And assuming that all 1,328 children above developed autism from the 1 billion doses administered it still doesn't explain the increase in ASD.

CDC | Data and Statistics | Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) | NCBDDD

Vaccines and Autism: A Tale of Shifting Hypotheses

That is an excellent point! I rather doubt any judge or lawyer went to law school AND medical school. I can't even imagine how much that would cost :yes:

Everything we do everyday has some sort of risk. You presume to go to the doctor or hospital to get better and any medication could cause a possible adverse reaction and any procedure could have a complication. Yes we get it, some people have been injured due to vaccines but they also help the majority of people.

Specializes in School Nursing, Public Health Nurse.
Everything we do everyday has some sort of risk. You presume to go to the doctor or hospital to get better and any medication could cause a possible adverse reaction and any procedure could have a complication. Yes we get it, some people have been injured due to vaccines but they also help the majority of people.

Yes! How do you not trust your Doctor's opinion for vaccines but you are okay with him/her prescribing your kid antibiotics and acetaminophen! I kinda get if you're anti-vax and have a herbal remedy belief for ailments and avoid the medical community. It's ridiculous to believe the "false" info about vaccines, but all other medication out there is fare game.

Specializes in Gerontology, Med surg, Home Health.

Perhaps if you did some research with a dictionary, you'd see the word vax does not pertain to vaccines or vaccination.

Everything in life carries a risk. We need to think about the risks vs. the benefits. Are vaccines 100% safe? Maybe not, but show me something that is.

I'm of the age when vaccines were new and I vividly remember lining up for the new polio vaccine. I also vividly remember the older kids in the neighbor hood who HAD polio.

hmm, just as an aside, I knew one lawyer who went back to school at about 45 to become a md....

That is an excellent point! I rather doubt any judge or lawyer went to law school AND medical school. I can't even imagine how much that would cost :yes:
hmm, just as an aside, I knew one lawyer who went back to school at about 45 to become a md....

I know many docs who became lawyers too.

I did not read all of the responses. From personal experience, I had measles at age 25. My temp was almost 105 and I felt incredibly ill. My body was covered with the measles rash. It did not itch. I felt hot and weak. I thought I had meningitis and thought I might die. I really felt so bad, I didn't care. My liver was also enlarged and my liver enzymes were elevated. I was vaccinated as an infant, but earlier than the recommended time. Since I had been vaccinated, they had a difficult time diagnosing my illness. Another person at the hospital where I worked was diagnosed with measles and the health department wanted to test me. It turned out, I had atypical measles syndrome which occurs in vaccinated people exposed to "wild" measles. Atypical measles syndrome: unusual hepa... [Am J Med Sci. 1981 Jan-Feb] - PubMed - NCBI

Never, ever would I want my children or grandchildren to be as ill as I was. I have parents born in the early part of the 20th century who had these diseases as children. They suffered terribly and knew of other kids who died. If you can avoid these diseases, why not take the precaution? Death is not the only consequence. Children can suffer lifelong sequelae, including neurological impairment. The rare child will have a serious adverse reaction to a vaccine. The risk is of death or disability is substantially less than the risk we take when we go on a car ride with our kids. It is true, as in my case, that sometimes vaccines are not effective. That too is the exception, not the rule.

It never ceases to amaze me who parents choose to believe when it comes to vaccines. The propaganda spread by Andrew Wakefield was a lie meant only to advance his position and prestige. Jenny McCarthy is an uninformed celebrity and the mom of a child suffering. Of course, she wants something we can identify and blame to explain her son's illness. That is human nature. It does not mean what she says is true. You would not go to a wood cutter for heart surgery. Why do you think that celebrities and known liars know better than respected scientists, pediatricians, and our nursing colleagues? Vaccinations save lives. What one does for one's own family, is to a great extent a private matter. However, because there are some children who cannot get vaccinated due to health conditions and those for whom vaccines do not confer immunity, by decreasing the percentage of vaccinated individuals, a parent's uninformed choices may put many people at risk.

Specializes in Emergency/Trauma/Critical Care Nursing.
I did not read all of the responses. From personal experience, I had measles at age 25. My temp was almost 105 and I felt incredibly ill. My body was covered with the measles rash. It did not itch. I felt hot and weak. I thought I had meningitis and thought I might die. I really felt so bad, I didn't care. My liver was also enlarged and my liver enzymes were elevated. I was vaccinated as an infant, but earlier than the recommended time. Since I had been vaccinated, they had a difficult time diagnosing my illness. Another person at the hospital where I worked was diagnosed with measles and the health department wanted to test me. It turned out, I had atypical measles syndrome which occurs in vaccinated people exposed to "wild" measles. Atypical measles syndrome: unusual hepa... [Am J Med Sci. 1981 Jan-Feb] - PubMed - NCBI

Never, ever would I want my children or grandchildren to be as ill as I was. I have parents born in the early part of the 20th century who had these diseases as children. They suffered terribly and knew of other kids who died. If you can avoid these diseases, why not take the precaution? Death is not the only consequence. Children can suffer lifelong sequelae, including neurological impairment. The rare child will have a serious adverse reaction to a vaccine. The risk is of death or disability is substantially less than the risk we take when we go on a car ride with our kids. It is true, as in my case, that sometimes vaccines are not effective. That too is the exception, not the rule.

It never ceases to amaze me who parents choose to believe when it comes to vaccines. The propaganda spread by Andrew Wakefield was a lie meant only to advance his position and prestige. Jenny McCarthy is an uninformed celebrity and the mom of a child suffering. Of course, she wants something we can identify and blame to explain her son's illness. That is human nature. It does not mean what she says is true. You would not go to a wood cutter for heart surgery. Why do you think that celebrities and known liars know better than respected scientists, pediatricians, and our nursing colleagues? Vaccinations save lives. What one does for one's own family, is to a great extent a private matter. However, because there are some children who cannot get vaccinated due to health conditions and those for whom vaccines do not confer immunity, by decreasing the percentage of vaccinated individuals, a parent's uninformed choices may put many people at risk.

Very well said!! Sorry to hear about how sick you were, but happy that everything is okay now.

It puzzles me that one learns all that is needed to be a nurse, but cannot ascribe to the science that guides our practice. If one chooses to dismiss vaccines as unimportant, even harmful, despite the abundance of hard science supporting this practice, what is next? Is there someone out there who will decide hand washing is unimportant? Or aseptic technic is unimportant. As nurses we are educated to think critically, research peer reviewed materials, and be up to date on proven treatment modalities. And above all to provide accurate information/education to our patients/clients. If you will not immunize your own child what do you tell parents when their child is diagnosed with whooping cough? Just my humble opinion, but if you cannot support the scientific principles adopted by mainstream medical practice, perhaps you should consider a different career.

To be frank, many of the injuries are a result of anaphylaxis, which does not indicate that there is actually something wrong with the vaccine, but rather a hyper- immune response on the part of the vaccinated. Perhaps we should sue farmers for selling eggs, wheat products, honey, etc. as they are supposed to be healthy, but do cause injury and yes, even death, in some.

I don't doubt that some injuries are a result of anaphylaxis, but there is no data that I could find on either HRSA or CDC websites that give stats by type of injury, so there's no way to say if they are "many" or few.

This is true but another unfortunate fact is the false hysteria about vaccines has made companies decide to settle instead of fight. "A climate of fear" . . . . instead of any truth about vaccines being truly harmful.

The Anti-Vaccine Movement And A Trial Lawyer-Funded Climate Of Fear - Forbes

How typical of the pro-vax group to label those who disagree as hysterical. As for the TRUTH about vaccines, all you have to do is check the HRSA and CDC websites to see that they are harmful.