Section: SCIENCE How Safe Are Vaccines?
Parents worried that
vaccines trigger autism are increasingly declining the shots for their kids.
That's raising fears that long-dormant diseases could return. What the science
says about the real risks--and what you should do
LIFE, IF YOU'RE A BACTERIUM OR virus, boils down to
this: finding a pristine human home to provide for your every need, from food
and nutrients to shelter against biological storms. As a microbial drifter, you
can literally travel the world, hopping from host to host when the opportunity
presents itself or when conditions at your temporary residence start heading
south. There's no worry about taking along life's necessities either-- viruses
in particular are adept at traveling light; incapable of reproducing on their
own, they think nothing of co-opting the reproductive machinery of their
cellular sponsors to help them spawn generation after generation of freeloading
progeny. But ever since Edward Jenner, a country doctor in England, inoculated
his son and a handful of other children against smallpox in 1796 by exposing
them to cowpox pus, things have been tougher on humans' most unwelcome
intruders. In the past century, vaccines against diphtheria, polio, pertussis,
measles, mumps and rubella, not to mention the more recent additions of
hepatitis B and chicken pox, have wired humans with powerful immune sentries to
ward off uninvited invasions. And thanks to state laws requiring vaccinations
for youngsters enrolling in kindergarten, the U.S. currently enjoys the highest
immunization rate ever; 77% of children embarking on the first day of school are
completely up to date on their recommended doses and most of the remaining
children are missing just a few shots.
Yet simmering beneath these national numbers is a trend
that's working in the microbes' favor--and against ours. Spurred by claims that
vaccinations can be linked to autism, increasing numbers of parents are raising
questions about whether vaccines, far from panaceas, are actually harmful to
children. When the immune system of a baby or young child is just coming online,
is it such a good idea to challenge it with antigens to so many bugs? Have the
safety, efficacy and side effects of this flood of inoculations really been
worked through? Just last month the U.S. government, which has always stood by
the safety of vaccines, acknowledged that a 9-year-old Georgia girl with a
preexisting cellular disease had been made worse by inoculations she had
received as an infant, which "significantly aggravated" the condition, resulting
in a brain disorder with autism-like symptoms.
Though the government stressed that the case was an
exceptional one, it provided exactly the smoking gun that vaccine detractors had
been looking for and vaccine proponents had been dreading. More and more, all
this wrangling over risks and benefits is leading confused parents simply to opt
out of vaccines altogether. Despite the rules requiring students to be
vaccinated, doctors can issue waivers to kids whose compromised immune system
might make vaccines risky. Additionally, all but two states allow waivers for
children whose parents object to vaccines on religious grounds; 20 allow parents
to opt out on philosophical grounds. Currently, nearly one-half of 1% of kids
enrolled in school are unvaccinated under a medical waiver; 2% to 3% have a
nonmedical one, and the numbers appear to be rising.
Parents of these unimmunized kids know that as long as
nearly all the other children get their shots, there should not be enough
pathogen around to sicken anyone. But that's a fragile shield.
Infectious-disease bugs continue to travel the globe, always ready to launch the
next big public-health threat. Pockets of intentionally unvaccinated children
provide a perfect place for a disease to squat, leading to outbreaks that spread
to other unprotected kids, infants and the elderly. Ongoing measles outbreaks in
four states are centered in such communities; one originated with an unimmunized
boy from San Diego who contracted the virus while traveling in Europe--where the
bug was thriving among intentionally unimmunized people in Switzerland. Dr. Anne
Schuchat, director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory
Diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), says, "We are
seeing more outbreaks that look different, concentrated among intentionally
unimmunized people. I hope they are not the beginning of a worse trend."
If they are, it's possible that once rampant diseases
such as measles, mumps and whooping cough will storm back, even in developed
nations with robust public-health programs. That is forcing both policymakers
and parents to wrestle with a dilemma that goes to the heart of democracy:
whether the common welfare should trump the individual's right to choose.
Parents torn between what's good for the world and what's good for their child
will--no surprise--choose the child. But even then, they wonder if that means to
opt for the vaccines and face the potential perils of errant chemistry or to
decline the vaccines and face the dangers of the bugs. There is, as yet, no
simple solution, but answers are emerging.
The Autism Riddle
MORE THAN ANY OTHER ISSUE, THE QUESTION of autism has
fueled the battle over vaccines. Since the 1980s, the number of vaccinations
children receive has doubled, and in that same time, autism diagnoses have
soared threefold. In 1998, British gastroenterologist Dr. Andrew Wakefield of
London's Royal Free Hospital published a paper in the journal the Lancet in
which he reported on a dozen young patients who were suffering from both
autism-like developmental disorders and intestinal symptoms that included
inflammation, pain and bloating. Eight of the kids began exhibiting signs of
autism days after receiving the MMR vaccine against measles, mumps and rubella.
While Wakefield and his co-authors were careful not to suggest that these cases
proved a connection between vaccines and autism, they did imply, provocatively,
that exposure to the measles virus could be a contributing factor to the
children's autism. Wakefield later went on to speculate that virus from the
vaccine led to inflammation in the gut that affected the brain development of
the children.
Like the initial tremor that triggers a massive
earthquake, Wakefield's theories resonated throughout the autism community,
where vaccines had been regarded with suspicion for another reason as well. Ever
since the 1930s, a mercury compound known as thimerosal had been included in
some vaccines--though not the measles inoculation--as a preservative to keep
them free of fungi and bacteria. Thimerosal can do serious damage to brain
tissue, especially in children, whose brains are still developing. It was
perhaps inevitable that parents would make a connection between the chemical and
autism, since symptoms typically appear around age 2, by which time babies have
already received a fair number of vaccines. That link could be merely temporal,
of course; babies also get their first teeth after they get their first
vaccines, but that doesn't mean one causes the other.
In 2001, however, a U.S. Food and Drug Administration
study revealed that a 6-month-old receiving the recommended complement of
childhood vaccinations was exposed to total levels of vaccine-based mercury
twice as high as the amount the EPA considers safe in a diet that includes fish.
By the end of that year, thimerosal-free formulations of the five inoculations
that included it--hepatitis B, diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis and some
versions of Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib)-- had replaced the older
versions. The result was a drop in mercury exposure in fully immunized
6-month-old babies from 187.5 micrograms to just trace amounts still found in
some flu vaccines. Yet there's been no effect on autism rates. In the seven
years since the cleaned-up vaccines were introduced, new cases of autism
continue to climb, reaching a rate of 1 in every 150 8-year-olds today. That
trend suggests that other factors, including heightened awareness of the
condition and possible genetic anomalies or environmental exposures, are behind
the climbing rates. What's more, in the decade since Wakefield's watershed
paper, 10 of its 13 authors have retracted their hypothesis, admitting that the
study did not produce solid enough evidence to support a connection between the
measles virus in the MMR vaccine and autism.
But the damage had been done. Parents, already uneasy
about immunizations, now felt betrayed by government health authorities and a
vaccine industry that simply kept the shots coming, with today's kids receiving
up to 28 injections for 14 diseases, more than double the number of shots
required in the 1970s. "There is no doubt in my mind that my child's first cause
of autism is the mercury in vaccines," says Ginny DeLeo, a New York science
teacher whose son Evan, born in 1993, was developing normally until he was a
year old. The day the boy received his fourth dose of Hib vaccine, De-Leo had to
rush him to the hospital with tremors and a 104°F (40°C) fever, which later led
to seizures. Evan recovered, and several months later he received the first of
two MMR shots. Within months, he stopped talking, and autism was diagnosed.
So, is there a link? In 2003, a 15-person committee
impaneled by the CDC and the National Institutes of Health analyzed the
available studies on thimerosal and its possible connections to autism and
concluded that there was no scientific evidence to support the link. In a
further show of confidence, the committee noted that it did "not consider a
significant investment in studies of the theoretical vaccine-autism connection
to be useful." Instead, the panel recommended that studies focus on less
explored genetic or biological explanations for the disease.
There is also little evidence to support the claim made
by antivaccine activists that the battery of shots kids receive can damage the
immune system rather than strengthen it. Experts stress that it's not the number
of inoculations that matters but the number of immune-stimulating antigens--or
proteins--in them. Thanks to a better understanding of which viral or bacterial
proteins are best at activating the immune system, that number has plummeted.
The original smallpox injection alone packed 200 different immune-alerting
antigens in a single shot. Today there are only 150 antigens in all 15 or so
shots babies get before they are 6 months old. "The notion that too many
vaccines can overwhelm the immune system is just not based on good science,"
says Dr. Paul Offit, chief of infectious diseases at Children's Hospital in
Philadelphia.
My Child, My
Choice
IF THE PUSH-BACK AGAINST VACCINES were only about the
science, doctors might have an easier time making their case. But there's more
going on than that. Parents object to the mandatory nature of the shots--and the
fact that their child's access to education hinges on compliance with the
immunization regulations. There's also the simple reality that the illnesses
kids are being inoculated against are rarely seen anymore. When diseases like
polio ran free in the early 1900s, the clamor was less about why we needed
vaccines than about why there weren't more of them. Once you've seen your
neighbor's toddler become paralyzed, you're a lot more likely to worry that the
same thing will happen to yours. "The fact is," says Of-fit, "young mothers
today never grew up with the disease."
What worries him and others is that young mothers of
tomorrow will--and that could be disastrous. CDC officials estimate that fully
vaccinating all U.S. children born in a given year from birth to adolescence
saves 33,000 lives, prevents 14 million infections and saves $10 billion in
medical costs. Part of the reason is that the vaccinations protect not only the
kids who receive the shots but also those who can't receive them--such as
newborns and cancer patients with suppressed immune systems. These vulnerable
folks depend on riding the so-called herd-immunity effect. The higher the
immunization rate in any population, the less likely that a pathogen will
penetrate the group and find a susceptible person inside. As immunization rates
drop, that protection grows thinner. That's what happened in the current measles
outbreaks in the western U.S., and that's what happened in Nigeria in 2001, when
religious and political leaders convinced parents that polio vaccines were
dangerous and their kids should not receive them. Over the next six years, not
only did Nigerian infection rates increase 30-fold, but the disease also broke
free and ranged out to 10 other countries, many of which had previously been
polio-free.
As long ago as 1905, the U.S. Supreme Court recognized
the power of the herd and ruled that states have the right to mandate
immunizations, not for the individual's health but for the community's. That
principle, say vaccine proponents, should still apply. "The decision to
vaccinate is a decision for your child," says Dr. fane Seward, deputy director
of viral diseases at the CDC, "but also a decision for society."
Some parents have taken to cherry-picking vaccines,
leaving out only the shots they believe their children don't need--such as those
for chicken pox and hepatitis B--and keeping up with what they see as the
life-or-death ones. But that can be a high-stakes game, as Kelly Lacek, a
Pennsylvania mother of three, learned. She stopped vaccinating her 2-month-old
son Matthew when her chiropractor raised questions about mercury in the shots.
Three years later, she came home to find the little boy feverish and gasping for
breath. Emergency-room doctors couldn't find the cause--until one experienced
physician finally asked the right question. "He took one look at Matthew and
asked me if he was fully vaccinated," says Lacek. "I said no." It turned out
Matthew had been infected with Hib, a virus that causes meningitis, swelling of
the airway and, in severe cases, swelling of the brain tissue. After relying on
a breathing tube for several days, Matthew recovered without any neurological
effects, and a grateful Lacek immediately got him and his siblings up to date on
their immunizations. "I am angry that people are promoting not getting
vaccinated and messing with people's lives like that," she now says.
Health officials are angry too. Encouraged in part by
the government report that seemed to clear vaccines of the autism charges, they
are beginning to take a harder line with parents who submit vaccine exemptions
for nonmedical reasons. In Maryland, where unvaccinated students are not
permitted in school, officials last November threatened to take parents to court
for truancy violations if their kids did not get all their shots so that they
could be cleared for class. On Long Island, N.Y., vaccine objectors are called
in for what some parents call "sincerity" interviews with school officials and
school-board attorneys to determine how genuinely the vaccines conflict with
religious convictions.
Even in cities where such interviews are not required,
the tensions are palpable. Says Sue Collins, a New Jersey mother who has not had
either of her two sons vaccinated: "Things are getting so nasty. People are
calling us bad parents, saying it's child abuse if we don't vaccinate our
children." In an effort to avoid potential conflicts, some parents are bypassing
the school system altogether, preferring to homeschool their kids so they won't
be forced to vaccinate them.
Common Ground
THAT STILL LEAVES THE BROADER COMMUNITY at risk. So, is
there room between public health and personal choice? Science may eventually
provide a way out. Most people agree that there may be kids with genetic
predispositions or other underlying conditions that make them susceptible to
being harmed by vaccines. The Georgia girl in the recent vaccine case is the
first such documented child, but her story suggests there could be others.
Though CDC director Julie Gerberding was quick to insist that the case should
not be considered an admission that vaccines can cause autism, some parents will
surely take it as just that. "In rare instances, there could be some
gene-vs.-exposure interaction that in theory could lead from the vaccine to
autism," says Dr. Tracy Lieu, director of the center for child-health-care
studies at Harvard Medical School. "The future of vaccine-safety research lies
in trying to answer questions of genomic contributions to responses to
vaccines." Screening for genetic profiles that are most commonly associated with
immune disorders, for example, would be a good place to start.
Whether tests like these, combined with detailed family
histories, will make a difference in the rates of developmental disorders like
autism isn't yet clear. But such a strategy could reveal new avenues of research
and lead to safer inoculations overall. Parents concerned about vaccine safety
would then have stronger answers to their questions about how their child might
be affected by the shots. Vaccines may be a medical marvel, but they are only
one salvo in our fight against disease-causing bugs. It's worth remembering that
viruses and bacteria have had millions of years to perfect their host-finding
skills; our abilities to rebuff them are only two centuries old. And in that
journey, both parents and public-health officials want the same thing--to
protect future generations from harm.
VACCINE TALLY
28 Number of doses of vaccines American
children receive by age 2 if they get the complete schedule of immunizations
recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
STAYING PROTECTED
77% Percentage of kindergartners in the
U.S. who are completely up to date on their vaccinations, in part because
schools require it. This is the country's highest rate of immunization
ever
OPTING OUT
2%-3% Percentage of school-age children
in the U.S. whose parents have received a religious or philosophical exemption
from state vaccination requirements
AUTISM
1 in 150 The prevalence of autism among
8-year-olds in the U.S. Autism rates have not declined, even though thimerosal,
which some believe contributes to the disease, was removed from vaccines in
2001
POLIO
888 Number of polio cases in Nigeria in
2006, after religious leaders convinced parents they should not allow their
children to be vaccinated. The country reported fewer than 30 cases in 2000
PHOTO (COLOR): Lying in wait: Six-week-old Gavin Hubbard
of New Hampshire bravely faces his series of five immunizations in the
comforting grasp of Mom
PHOTO (COLOR): Close Call: Matthew Lacek, 5, nearly died
after falling ill with Haemophilus influenzae type b. He had not been vaccinated
against the virus because his parents worried about the mercury in the shots. He
is now up to date on all his vaccines
PHOTO (COLOR): Not for Us: Sue Collins of Long Hill
Township, N.J., has never allowed her sons (Zach, 11, and Garrett, 8) to be
vaccinated. "My husband and I believe that we are born with an immune system,
and we need to trust that," she says
~~~~~~~~
By Alice Park
Copyright © Time Inc., 2008. All rights reserved. No
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