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Health & Fitness

Are We Nuts Over Vaccines?

We try to protect our kids from allergic reactions. But what about protection from life-threatening illnesses?

"Nut-free," "Peanut-free," and the latest and greatest "Nut sensitive:"  The rage in preschools and elementary schools across the country is to protect our nut-challenged children from nut exposure, even if it means not exposing them to nuts in the same building or playground, to minimize their risk of life-threatening allergic reactions.  Allergic concerns have expanded beyond nuts, to gluten and dairy, to the degree that some schools now prohibit "powdered cheese products," to protect children who are especially dairy sensitive.  Some schools are not "nut-" or "dairy-free", but are merely "nut-" or "dairy-sensitive".  I hope that this means that they take special precautions, beyond just discussing the inner feelings and emotions of those "sensitive" to certain foods. 

Please don’t take any of this as sarcasm. I am fully aware that food allergies are bona fide, and when they occur to the point of danger, kids can die, or nearly die, from a severe food reaction.   An elementary school girl recently died of a previously undocumented allergic reaction while at school.  So an institution’s decision to either ban or, well, "sensitize," potential food allergens, for the greater good, becomes a public health issue, even on the small scale of a school’s microcosm. 

This is a good thing.  By not sending your child to school with their favorite PBJ or cheese puff, you are protecting others.  Not necessarily your nut-insensitive child, who happily gobbles powdery cheese products and peanut butter cups in the comfort of your BPA-free hybrid vehicle, but others. Your child’s sacrifice for the greater good is worth it; seeing a small friend go into anaphylactic shock can scar a tyke for life, not to mention the allergic child himself.  And this protection of others is important.  Equally important is teachers knowing and being re-certified in CPR (which, by the way, might have saved that elementary school girl in my previous example, had it been initiated before paramedics arrived).   Maybe even as important as getting immunized.

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Is there a lunch table for the vaccine-sensitive?   We promise not to serve nuts.   I just wonder if schools would consider instituting "vaccine-free" zones.  You know, for the greater good?  Just as we are protective of the nut-challenged from life-threatening reactions, what about protecting children from life-threatening illnesses? 

Public schools can mandate that all must be immunized, but do allow for exemptions, which are pretty easy to get.  Many public schools report immunization rates of less than 50 percent of their students.  Private and parochial schools can strongly encourage immunizations, but they cannot mandate that all must be immunized.   Some private schools have immunization rates of less than 20 percent.  Yes, that’s right a parent might pay $25,000 a year to a school where less than one in five of their classmates are immunized against life-threatening illnesses such as measles, polio, bacteria which cause meningitis, or pertussis (the one that causes whooping cough). 

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In order for a school to be considered truly immunized, from a public health (or greater good) standpoint, that particular school’s immunization rate needs to be 90 percent or higher. 

Parents have varied reasons, primarily personal, for why they choose not to immunize their children.  Some parents are concerned about autism risk, even though all of the studies connecting the rise in autism with immunizations have been debunked.   Some are concerned that their child’s body is too small to tolerate a large dose of so many vaccines at once, so they spread out the schedule recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) to create their own tailor-made schedule. 

Some parents think that the illnesses kids are getting immunized against don’t exist anymore, so why bother getting immunized, since illnesses such as polio, measles, mumps, and tetanus have been eradicated anyway.

But here’s the reality:  these diseases do exist, and we’re going to see more of them come back.  I read about pertussis, the bacterium that causes whooping cough, when I was in medical school.  We would learn about this horrible respiratory disease and how it afflicted and took the lives of so many of those poor shlubs from the 1930’s, who hadn’t figure out prevention yet.  We would read about them as if they were some primitive Neanderthal tribe, barely able to put two sticks together to make fire.  Occasionally a crusty old professor would tell tales of the "days of whooping cough."  Ho hum. 

Well, it’s back.   Not so ho-hum anymore.  The hundred-day cough, which became an outbreak in California and other states, resulted in many children dying.  During the tail end of medical school, I saw H. flu infections, a bacterium that caused severe respiratory illnesses, meningitis, eye infections, and blocked breathing.  The miracle of the vaccine for H. flu, which became widely used in 1999, nearly wiped it out.  Until now.  It’s back, too. 

Dr. Jonas Salk, the co-creator of the polio vaccine, spoke at my medical school graduation.  Polio killed millions, and paralyzed millions more.   Thank you, Jonas Salk, and your sidekick Albert Sabin.  We haven’t seen polio outbreaks in the U.S. since the 1950’s, when Salk and Sabin’s vaccine began being given widely.  Well, we haven’t seen outbreaks yet.  We might have to wait until the immunization rates drop some more.   But let’s hope not.  Polio, whooping cough, meningitis, and measles, to name a few, are still out there – and they could once again be coming to a school near you.

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