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Eva Graziano of the Albany County Department of Health refrigerates swine flu vaccine in Albany, N.Y., Tuesday. A total of 91,000 doses of the vaccine are expected to be delivered to New York counties outside New York City by the end of the week.
Mike Groll/AP
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Why many
Americans are wary of the swine flu vaccine
Government officials insist that the swine flu vaccine is safe.
But critics have doubts about its effectiveness and effect on children.
By
Patrik Jonsson | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
Atlanta - As
the H1N1 flu vaccine begins arriving at clinics
around the country this week, Americans are
confronting a difficult question: Is the risk of
getting the swine flu higher than potential
complications from a vaccination?
Most US doctors say the new H1N1 vaccine, though
quickly tested, is safe and effective. The biggest
problem right now, they say, is making sure there's
enough vaccine for everybody who wants a shot.
But as the US embarks on its largest vaccine
campaign in history, a number of concerns –
including actual effectiveness, its effect on
children with asthma, and the use of miniscule
amounts of mercury as a preservative in adult doses
– are feeding into a growing reluctance by as many
two-thirds of all US moms and dads to give their
children the shot, according to a recent Consumer
Reports survey.
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Health experts worry that the pushback could
jeopardize the primary aim of government officials:
to contain the spread of swine flu in day cares and
schools by urging everyone between ages 6 and 24 to
get vaccinated.
"Polls are showing that more parents are more
concerned about giving their child another
vaccination than the child getting seriously ill,
and I think that's going to seriously blunt the
government's effort to prevent a massive outbreak,"
says Sonja Gerrard, an epidemiologist at the
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
The government hopes nearly half of all Americans
will get the shots. So far, between 500 and 600
fatalities have been reported in the US, compared
with the oft-cited Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) figure of 36,000 annual fatalities
from seasonal flu, primarily among the elderly.
But some critics of the vaccine suggest that the
flu shots are not particularly effective in
children, and worse, could cause complications in
children with asthma. Bill Sardi, a health
journalist in San Dimas, Calif., worries that the
vaccine could lead to a more virulent strain as the
virus is forced, through what he calls "genetic
pressure," to mutate.
So deep is the resistance that there have been
reports of "flu parties" where parents expose
themselves and their children to the flu. Their
thinking is that they will strengthen their immune
systems – what they see as a sort of natural
vaccination.
For its part, the CDC says flu shots can reduce
the risk of infection by as much as 70 to 90 percent
in primarily healthy adults.
"There's no doubt there's some benefit" to
vaccines, William Schaffner, an epidemiologist at
Vanderbilt University, told American Medical News
earlier this year.
In aggregate, even a small reduction in flu cases
could have a huge impact on overall transmission
rates across the country, says Dr. Gerrard of the
University of Michigan. That is the main reason why
the $3 billion vaccination program, despite
variations in effectiveness, has become the
country's primary strategy to fight the swine flu.
Partly to ease fears about H1N1 vaccination
risks, the CDC is for the first time conducting an
extensive survey to track side effects from the new
H1N1 vaccinations, including effects on those with
asthma. Officials hope this will help debunk other
popular prejudices, such as the assertion that
vaccinations are linked to autism – something that
has never been proven scientifically.
"One reason why folks fear vaccines is that
they're don't think they're being treated seriously
when there are reactions or they think a particular
condition might be linked," says Gerrard. "Now when
we have a renewed effort towards maintaining an open
discussion between people who are taking vaccines
and scientists analyzing the data, people will
become more comfortable with these public health
measures." |