Do
vaccines work?
Yes.
Vaccination is one of the greatest achievements of medicine and has spared millions of
people the effects of devastating diseases.
Before vaccines
became widely used, infectious diseases killed thousands of children and adults each year
in the Nepal:
Data from
USA:
Before
1985, Haemophilus Influenzae type b (Hib) caused serious infections in 20,000
children each year, including meningitis (12,000 cases) and pneumonia
(7,500 cases).(1)
- In the 1964-1965
epidemic, there were 12.5 million cases of rubella (German measles).(2) Of the 20,000
infants born with congenital rubella syndrome, 11,600 were deaf, 3,580 were blind, and
1,800 were mentally retarded as a result of the infection.(2)
- Before 1963, more
than 3 million cases of measles and 500 deaths from measles were reported each year.(2)
More than 90% of children had measles by age 15.(2)
- In 1952, polio
paralyzed more than 21,000 people.(2)
- In the early 1940s,
there was an average of 175,000 cases of pertussis (whooping cough) per year, resulting in
the deaths of 8,000 children annually.(2)
- In the 1920s, there
were 100,000 to 200,000 cases of diphtheria each year and 13,000 people died from the
disease.(2)
As a result of the
high level of immunization in the USA these disease have declined to near zero. For
example, only 81 cases of serious Hib disease were reported and confirmed in 1997.(3) In
addition, due to vaccination smallpox has been eradicated, polio has been eliminated, and
only 1 case of diphtheria, 86 cases of measles, 238 cases of rubella, and 8 cases of
congenital rubella syndrome were reported in 1999.(2)
Is it better to be
naturally infected rather than vaccinated?
No. Diseases
cause suffering and, in some cases, permanent disability or death. Vaccines allow a person
to be protected from the disease without experiencing the serious adverse effects of that
illness.
- It is much better to
gain immunity from a vaccine. Vaccine-preventable diseases can kill; they can cause
permanent disabilities such as paralysis from polio, liver damage or liver cancer from
hepatitis B infection, and deafness from meningitis caused by several bacteria (Hib,
pneumococci, and meningococci). In addition, brain damage can result from measles, Hib
meningitis, or pertussis. If a woman gets rubella while pregnant, her baby could have
serious birth defects.
- Immunity from a
vaccine offers protection against future disease that is similar to immunity acquired from
a natural infection, although several doses of a vaccine may have to be given for a child
to have a full immune response.
- For some vaccines
(e.g. tetanus and Hib) the vaccine is sometimes better at creating immunity than a natural
infection would be.(2)
Because of better hygiene
and sanitation, hadn't diseases already begun to disappear before vaccines were
introduced?
No, they had
not begun to disappear. In the 20th century, infectious diseases began to be better
controlled because of improvements in hygiene and sanitation (clean water and pest
control). However, the incidence of vaccine-preventable diseases only began to drop
dramatically after the vaccines for those diseases were licensed and began to be used in
large numbers of children.
- For example, there
were about 500,000 reported cases and 500 deaths from measles each year before the measles
vaccine was licensed in 1963.(2) In 1998, only 100 cases were reported in the United
States.(4)
- Since the Hib
vaccine was introduced in 1985, serious Hib disease has declined from about 20,000 cases
per year to 81 cases in 1997.(1,3)
During an outbreak, aren't
the majority of people who catch a disease those who have been vaccinated?
Although vaccines have
very high effectiveness rates, they are not completely effective for 100% of the people
who receive them. For example, a full series of measles vaccine will protect 99 of 100
children from measles, and polio vaccine will protect 99 of 100 children from polio.(2)
This means that when there is a disease outbreak, the very small number of people for whom
the vaccine did not work may still be able to catch the disease. Because almost all of our
children are immunized, and only few are not, it can be the case that during an epidemic
the majority of cases occur among children who were immunized. However, the fact remains
that those who have not received the vaccine are much more likely to catch the disease.
- By way of example,
consider an actual measles outbreak in Colorado in December 1994.(5) Out of 625 children
exposed to the disease, 17 got measles. Of those 609 who had previously been vaccinated,
only 10 (or 1.6%) developed measles. Of the 16 children who were not immunized, 7 (or 44%)
developed measles. Thus, the risk for immunized children was less than 2% while the risk
for unimmunized children was 44%.
If vaccine-preventable
diseases have been virtually eliminated from the United States, why do American children
need to be vaccinated?
Although many of these
diseases have the potential to be eliminated, outbreaks of diphtheria, measles, and other
vaccine-preventable diseases still occur.
- Children who are not
vaccinated against measles are 35 times more likely than immunized children to catch the
disease.(6) Ten years ago (during the 1989 to 1991 measles epidemic), state health
departments in the United States reported 55,622 measles cases, 11,251 hospitalizations,
and 125 deaths.(2,7) Research has shown that these epidemic numbers are due to the fact
that in some areas only 50% of preschool-aged children had received the vaccine.(2)
- Without vaccines,
the diseases we are now protected from will return. Thousands of children will become
sick, some will have long-lasting health problems, and some will die.
- Other countries do
not have the same levels of immunization that we benefit from in the United States.
Therefore, we must all remain protected with vaccines because dangerous diseases largely
under control in the United States are only a plane ride away.