Soho Pediatric Group  
     
     
Immunization Information
Vaccines And Vaccine Safety
 
  We believe that immunizations are safe, effective, and advisable. We also understand that parents have concerns about vaccinating their children. Listed below are the recommendations of the American Academy of Pediatrics for childhood immunizations through age 6 and web sites that can give you a better understanding about immunizations and their safety. We encourage you to bring your questions about vaccines and the vaccination schedule to us. All vaccines are preservative (thimerosal) free.

DTaP: 5 doses

IPV: 4 doses

HIB: 4 doses

HBV: 3 doses

MMR: 2 doses

Varivax: 2 doses

Prevnar: 4 doses

HAV: 2 doses

Rotateq: 3 doses


DTaP: diphtheria - tetanus - acellular pertussis
IPV: injected polio
HIB: hemophilus influenza B
Prevnar: pneumococcus
MMR: measles - mumps - rubella
Varivax: chicken pox
HBV: hepatitis B vaccine
HAV: hepatitis A vaccine
Rotateq: rotavirus oral vaccine

American Academy of Pediatrics
http://www.cispimmunize.org/

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
http://www.vaccine.chop.edu

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/

Immunization Action Coalition
http://www.immunize.org/safety/general.htm

National Network for Immunization Information
http://www.immunizationinfo.org

Consumer Reports Magazine

http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/babies-kids/childrens-health/immunizations-and-vaccinations/vaccine-safety/vaccinations-for-children-4-07/parents-questions/0704_vaccinations-for-children_parents-questions.htm

 

 

"An Epidemic of Fear: How Panicked Parents Skipping Shots Endangers Us All," 
  http://www.wired.com/magazine/2009/10/ff_waronscience

 




Are Unvaccinated Children A Risk

The web link below was broadcast on the Today Show on March 26, 2008.

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/23776494#23776494



Thimerosal in Vaccines - A History

The link below from the FDA and and the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research details the history of the use of thimerosal as a preservative in vaccines. It also provides detailed tables on the contents and history of preservatives in vaccines.

http://www.fda.gov/Cber/vaccine/thimerosal.htm



Vaccine Liability Claims

The following Op-Ed piece was printed in the New York Times on March 31, 2008. It's a very important discussion on what's happening in the courts regarding liability claims related to vaccinations.


New York Times
March 31, 2008

Op-Ed Contributor
Inoculated Against Facts
By PAUL A. OFFIT
Philadelphia

ON March 6, Terry and Jon Poling stood outside a federal courthouse in Atlanta, Ga., with their 9-year-old daughter Hannah and announced that the federal government had admitted that vaccines had contributed to her autism. The news was shocking. Health officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and at the American Academy of Pediatrics have steadfastly assured the public that vaccines do not cause autism. Now, in a special vaccine claims court, the federal government appeared to have said exactly the opposite. What happened?

The answer is wrapped up in the nature of the unusual court where the Poling case was heard. In 1986, after a flood of lawsuits against vaccine makers threatened the manufacture of vaccines for children, Congress created the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, financed by a tax on every dose of vaccine.

As part of the program, a group of scientists, doctors and lawyers listed all the health problems that might be linked to vaccines. The oral polio vaccine could in rare cases cause paralysis, for example, and an early version of the rotavirus vaccine might cause intestinal blockage. (In the interest of full disclosure: I am a co-inventor and co-patent holder of a newer rotavirus vaccine.)

If, at a trial in a special court, a preponderance of scientific evidence suggested that a vaccine caused one of these problems, a family would be compensated quickly, generously and fairly. Because no one could sue vaccine makers without going through this special court, the number of lawsuits against vaccine makers fell drastically.

The system worked fine until a few years ago, when vaccine court judges turned their back on science by dropping preponderance of evidence as a standard. Now, petitioners need merely propose a biologically plausible mechanism by which a vaccine might cause harm, even if their explanation contradicts published studies. In 2006, for example, Dorothy Werderitsh claimed in the vaccine court that a hepatitis B vaccine had triggered an autoimmune response in her brain that led to multiple sclerosis. Two large studies had clearly shown that hepatitis B vaccine could neither cause nor exacerbate multiple sclerosis, but the court ruled in favor of Ms. Werderitsh, elevating a hypothesis above epidemiological evidence.

The Hannah Poling case is similar. In 2000, when Hannah was 19 months old, she received five shots against nine infectious diseases. Over the next several months, she developed symptoms of autism. Subsequent tests showed that Hannah has a mitochondrial disorder - her cells are unable to adequately process nutrients - and this contributed to her autism. An expert who testified in court on the Polings' behalf claimed that the five vaccines had stressed Hannah's already weakened cells, worsening her disorder. Without holding a hearing on the matter, the court conceded that the claim was biologically plausible.

On its face, the expert's opinion makes no sense. Even five vaccines at once would not place an unusually high burden on a child's immune system. The Institute of Medicine has found that multiple vaccines do not overwhelm or weaken the immune system. And although natural infections can worsen symptoms of chronic neurological illnesses in children, vaccines are not known to.

"There is no evidence that children with mitochondrial enzyme deficiencies are worsened by vaccines," Salvatore DiMauro, a professor of neurology at Columbia who is the nation's leading expert on the disorder, told me. Indeed, children like Hannah Poling who are especially susceptible to infections are most likely to benefit from vaccines.

Supporters of the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program argue reasonably that the program should err on the side of overcompensation - a relief valve that is needed in a society that mandates vaccines. But there is a price for this largesse. In the past few years, parents of 4,800 autistic children have filed claims to the vaccine court which have yet to be heard. And average awards in other recent vaccine cases have been more than $800,000. Furthermore, because uncompensated claims in vaccine court can spill into state courts, the Poling decision will likely draw more personal-injury lawyers to the fray. "It's a beginning," said Kevin Conway, a Boston-based lawyer who represents more than 1,200 families with vaccine injury claims.

The vaccine court should return to the preponderance-of-evidence standard. But much damage has already been done by the Poling decision. Parents may now worry about vaccinating their children, more autism research money may be steered toward vaccines and away from more promising leads and, if similar awards are made in state courts, pharmaceutical companies may abandon vaccines for American children. In the name of trying to help children with autism, the Poling decision has only hurt them.


Paul A. Offit, chief of the infectious diseases division of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, is the author of "Vaccinated: One Man's Quest to Defeat the World's Deadliest Diseases."