Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

When Parents Say No to Child Vaccinations
The New York Times ^ | 11/30/02 | Donald G. McNeil

Posted on 11/30/2002 6:22:59 PM PST by SeenTheLight

VASHON ISLAND, Wash. — Kate Packard, the school nurse here, has a nightmare she sums up in five words: "measles coming across the water."

If measles did make the 20-minute ferry ride across Puget Sound from Seattle — hardly unthinkable, since a case occurred last year near a ferry terminal in West Seattle — public health officers say the whole Vashon Island school district could be shut down until the island's last case disappeared or an emergency vaccination drive took effect.

Eighteen percent of Vashon Island's 1,600 primary school students have legally opted out of vaccination against childhood diseases, including polio, measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria, whooping cough, tetanus, hepatitis B and chicken pox. The island is a counterculture haven where therapies like homeopathy and acupuncture are popular, and where some cite health problems among neighbors' children that they attribute to vaccinations.

Most families opting out of vaccination here have obtained "philosophical exemptions" from normal vaccination requirements — exemptions that in Washington and several other states, including California and Colorado, can be claimed simply by signing a school form.

Across the country, about 1 percent of all children are exempt from vaccination, said Dr. Walter A. Orenstein, director of the National Immunization Program at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The agency's surveys suggest that more than 90 percent of all American children have had most shots, except for the new chicken-pox vaccine.

But from Vashon Island to Boulder, Colo., to towns in Missouri and Massachusetts, there are "hot spots" where many children go unprotected. In a 1999 survey, 11 states reported increases in exemptions.

Clusters of unvaccinated children are not only in potential danger themselves, health officials say, but are also a threat to the "herd immunity" that walls out epidemics, sheltering fetuses, infants too young to be immunized, old people with weakened immune systems and even vaccinated classmates who remain at risk because no vaccine is 100 percent effective.

When only a few parents use "herd immunity" to let their children escape the small risks of vaccination, the system still works.

But health officials become concerned in states like California, where it is easier for a parent to sign the waiver form than to have a child vaccinated. "People take the path of least resistance," said Daniel A. Salmon, a vaccination expert at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. "What I do to my child can put other children at risk." In 1989-90, measles broke out among unimmunized immigrant children in Southern California, causing 43,000 cases and 101 deaths.

Vaccine resisters cite an array of reasons. "Sometimes it's distrust in government, feeling it's in bed with the vaccine industry and `everyone's making money off our kids,' " Mr. Salmon said. Sometimes the objections are religious, as among Christian Scientists and some Amish congregations. Sometimes a community is scared when a child is truly harmed by side effects; the live polio vaccine, for example, is thought to cause about eight deaths a year.

Some parents are upset at the sheer number of injections a child must get — usually about 20 by age 2. Others are convinced — despite evidence to the contrary — that vaccines are highly likely to cause severe health problems, like seizures and autism.

Here on Vashon Island, a community of 10,000, word spread quickly when the 10-month-old baby of Gail O'Grady, a midwife who also works at Minglement Natural Foods, died unexpectedly in his crib in 1984 two weeks after his first immunization; when Pam Beck's daughter Rachel suffered four years of seizures that began minutes after her first whooping-cough shot; when Nancy Soriano's son, Alex, developed autism after tetanus and polio vaccinations.

Some doctors they consulted disagreed, but all three mothers were sure vaccines were to blame.

Alex, Ms. Soriano said, changed from "a bright-eyed, happy, beautiful kid" to a severely autistic 4-year-old who "lived curled up in a ball, screaming and screaming and screaming." She says she has nearly cured him by removing milk and glutens from his diet.

Public health specialists suggest that the resistance to vaccines is a consequence of the success of vaccinations: People, they say, no longer fear diseases they have never seen.

"I remember how the fear of polio changed our lives — not going to the swimming pool in summer, not going to the movies, not getting involved with crowds," said Dr. Edward P. Rothstein, 60, a Pennsylvania pediatrician who helps the American Academy of Pediatrics make immunization recommendations. "I remember pictures of wards full of iron lungs, hundreds in a room, with kids who couldn't breathe in them. It affected daily life more than AIDS does today."

Now, with the rare side effects of the live vaccine, "there's a risk of about eight kids a year dying, so people don't want to be vaccinated," he said, adding, "When polio was around, people gladly took that risk."

Rubella, Dr. Rothstein went on, "is, for the most part, a nothing disease" — the reason to keep vaccinating against it is to protect fetuses. "In the 1960's," he said, "50,000 to 60,000 babies were born with small heads, or deaf, or blind or with cataracts" because their pregnant mothers had been exposed to rubella.

All 50 states allow medical exemptions for children who are immuno-compromised or allergic to vaccines; 47 states — all but Arkansas, Mississippi and West Virginia — allow religious exemptions; and 17 allow personal or philosophical ones. But how many children receive the exemptions depends partly on how much red tape is involved, a study in the American Journal of Public Health found. In states where parents must go to a state office for exemption forms, get their signatures notarized or produce letters from a religious authority, exemption rates tend to be lower.

The only states with exemption rates greater than 2 percent, the disease center said, are Michigan, Washington and Wisconsin.

Still, health officials say that in recent years public sentiment has often run against vaccination. The news media publicize stories of autism, seizures and crib death that followed vaccination. More than a dozen Internet sites specialize in describing the dangers of vaccines.

Vashon Island is both a commuters' haven served by high-speed ferries to Seattle and a home to the counterculture — a place where the telephone company's garage features a mural of a Frisbee-catching dog. Millionaires have shore homes while the self-named Rainbow People live in tents in the woods.

In interviews, parents who have signed forms to exempt their children from vaccination appeared to be educated, attuned to their children's health and full of opinions about vaccines, though some cited "facts" that the disease center disputes. Most parents mixed unconventional therapies like homeopathy, acupuncture and chiropractic, and conventional medicines like antibiotics and painkillers, Most said they were suspicious of the vaccine industry.

"I consider well-baby care to be a capitalist plot," Maryam Steffen, a mother of four said only half-kidding.

If anyone would seem to be a living argument for tetanus vaccination, it is Camille Borst, 25. When she was 12, she stepped on a nail. Her mother, who opposes vaccination, did not take her to a hospital until her foot was so inflamed she could not stand on it. But Ms. Borst says proudly that she has not immunized her own children, Deven, 9, or Casper, 4.

Her mother, Adrienne Forest, 47, who is home-schooling her grandchildren in a neat, shingled mobile home in a clearing of fir and alder trees, said she was sorry she let the hospital give Camille other vaccines. "It was a moment of weakness," she said. The nurses who angrily told her that Camille could have died "totally freaked me out," she said.

From 1995 to 1999, said Ms. Packard, the school nurse, an epidemic here of whooping cough, which can be fatal in infants, hospitalized some infants and left some children with chronic asthma. Ms. Forest's grandson Deven had whooping cough two years ago and, she conceded, probably passed the disease to 10 other children, including an infant.

"Yeah, that bothered me," Ms. Forest said. "But I called everybody and we studied up on what you can do to build up the immune system."

The baby "did just fine," she said. "On Vashon Island, you have middle-class people who eat healthy and keep warm. If everyone was poor-poor, not breast-fed, not eating right — that might be a reason to vaccinate." But she and her daughter remain steadfastly opposed.

Meg White, 45, though, now somewhat regrets not vaccinating. Three years ago, her whole family, including her infant son Julian, had whooping cough "really, really bad" for more than three months.

"My son would turn all shades of purple," she said. "He stopped breathing several times and we took him to the hospital. My daughter was terrified of going to sleep because then it got worse. She would vomit all over the place. My husband cracked ribs from coughing."

Now, Ms. White said, she would advise other mothers to vaccinate against whooping cough, polio and tetanus, but only with the newest vaccines. She still has not vaccinated Julian, now 3, against measles, mumps, rubella or chicken pox.

Julian is in nursery school at Puddlestompers, whose director, Tressa Aspiri, also changed her mind about not vaccinating after her older children got whooping cough.

She makes no recommendations to parents when they fill out the school's vaccination form, she said, though she feels that vaccines are safer than they were when her children were born in the mid-1980's.

"I still feel strongly that it's the parents' choice," Ms. Aspiri said.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: contagiousdisease; hippies; medicine; vaccinations; vaccines
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-62 next last
eeewww
1 posted on 11/30/2002 6:22:59 PM PST by SeenTheLight
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: PoisedWoman
Coming to your town. Immigration and it's after affects. Wonderful.
2 posted on 11/30/2002 6:41:58 PM PST by I_Love_My_Husband
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: I_Love_My_Husband
Under liberalism, civilization crumbles.
3 posted on 11/30/2002 6:44:35 PM PST by SeenTheLight
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: SeenTheLight
Well, you and I know this MORE than almost anyone else here :)

BTW

Chappy Channukkah!!! (We're having Star Of David pasta tonight in celebration!!)
4 posted on 11/30/2002 6:46:36 PM PST by I_Love_My_Husband
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: SeenTheLight
The physicians that are old enough to remember the out breaks of "whooping cough" and other serious childhood diseases consider modern vaccinations a miracle. As usual, we are once again going to be taught by the ignorant. That to be vaccinated is just as important as airport security and immigration enforcement. It is like we have to develop the wheel every 20 years for these people that choose ignorance. They are the other side of the radical muslim coin, only they are us.
5 posted on 11/30/2002 6:47:11 PM PST by elbucko
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SeenTheLight
Wasn't Vashon Island the hometown locale of "Five Easy Pieces"? It's a beautiful spot.
6 posted on 11/30/2002 6:50:16 PM PST by Cicero
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SeenTheLight
A case can be made for both sides. However, to not vaccinate for one reason or another and have one child on the island get polio, measles (or German measles), mumps, rubella, chicken pox, or some other disease could easily decimate the island's population or those that haven't been vaccinated since they would all be quarantined. That's not a responsibility one would wish upon oneself.
7 posted on 11/30/2002 6:52:27 PM PST by lilylangtree
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SeenTheLight
I lved in Spokane when I was a kid, almost fifty years ago, smallpox was the only shot required. I have had Measles, Chicken pox, Whooping Cough, these were normal kid things when I was young. The only blessing was the polio shots.
8 posted on 11/30/2002 7:01:22 PM PST by Little Bill
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SeenTheLight
My kids and I and my better half have gotten all the vaccine's except for the Hepatitis B.
That is the only one I don't trust.
9 posted on 11/30/2002 7:01:44 PM PST by Slyfox
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: lilylangtree
These people are morons. I heard of a story in Japan where for some reason, fear of immunizations or legal, most people did not give their kids vaccinations. That year 248 kids died of the disease where maybe one child would have had a bad reaction.
The risks of not getting the shots is far worse than the disease.
10 posted on 11/30/2002 7:06:00 PM PST by Maxy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: SeenTheLight
I would be careful to trust the government in blanket fashion on vaccines while CDC and NIH do well in most of them a few had their problems like the swine flu vaccine and a few others. The smallpox vaccine and the Anthrax vaccine are not vaccines I will take whether I am ordered to or not. I have done my homework on both of them and while I am trusting of most of the vaccines out there I will not take those two.

11 posted on 11/30/2002 7:08:11 PM PST by ICE-FLYER
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SeenTheLight
"My son would turn all shades of purple," she said. "He stopped breathing several times and we took him to the hospital. My daughter was terrified of going to sleep because then it got worse. She would vomit all over the place. My husband cracked ribs from coughing."

They were damned lucky no one in the family died. Irresponsible tinfoil parental behavior.

12 posted on 11/30/2002 7:13:00 PM PST by Scully
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: All
I think these parents are idiots. Why let your child get sick with a possibly fatal disease when you don't have to? The amount of children that have bad reactions to vaccines is extremely small. It is just irresponsible and bad parenting to NOT vaccinate your child. As a parent, you have the responsibility to protect your child in every way you can. These parents are obviously shirking that duty.

I vaccinated both my kids. No problems. I even got a booster MMR and tetanus for myself. And you know what? If we had a biological attack, I would get the smallpox and the anthrax vaccinations, too. I'd rather give myself a fighting chance than no chance at all!
13 posted on 11/30/2002 7:23:05 PM PST by Morrigan
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: ICE-FLYER
The smallpox vaccine and the Anthrax vaccine are not vaccines I will take....

I have had both as well as a few others, both for Army and travel reasons. The vaccine the world, including the US, is most in need of is one against ignorance and superstition.

14 posted on 11/30/2002 7:25:14 PM PST by elbucko
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: lilylangtree
...to not vaccinate for one reason or another and have one child on the island get polio, measles (or German measles), mumps, rubella, chicken pox, or some other disease could easily decimate the island's population

With the exception of polio, and smallpox (no longer available) omitting any or all of the other vaccines could not possibly, "decimate," the island. Death from these disease is unheard of. In the 40's and 50's, no child was vaccinated against any of these, "childhood diseases," (because there were no such vaccines), almost every child got them, and all lived. (There are exceptions to everything. Some child might have rarely died of one of these diseases, but then some children die from the vaccines.)

Polio is a devastating disease, unlike the others, although an outbreak is extemely unlikely.

Hank

15 posted on 11/30/2002 7:31:17 PM PST by Hank Kerchief
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: Morrigan
I think these parents are idiots.

I think so too. But, I am beginning to smell a rat in the form of trial lawyers. I wouldn't put it past them to hype up the vaccine hysteria for both political purpose (tort reform) and public awareness. I am sure lawyers are standing by their "toll free numbers" just in case someone has a shot reaction.

16 posted on 11/30/2002 7:31:41 PM PST by elbucko
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: SeenTheLight
We opted out several years ago. No regrets.
17 posted on 11/30/2002 7:33:13 PM PST by Jael
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SeenTheLight
All this is very good in a world where vaccinations have wiped out most of the awfull childhood diseases that used to ravage at will. However, when measles hits, if it is not the mutated form brought to our shores by immigrants, it is not too horrible, but the mutated form is. Polio, you do not remember polio epidemics, or smallpox or whooping cough, I do. Strep throat in a child is scarlet fever. Chicken pox is not too bad it the child is young. Mumps, if you are a girl it is ok, but boys can be made sterile. Any time vaccinations are given there is a chance of someone getting a reaction, but if no one got vaccinations it would be horrific if there were epidemics. Flu shots in the young, elderly and lung diseased are necessary. If the Big Flu hits thousand could die. I would rather take the risk than have epidemics that once were obliterated take over again and they could with all the unvaccinated immigrants coming ito this country.
18 posted on 11/30/2002 7:35:40 PM PST by wingnuts'nbolts
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SeenTheLight
We opted out several years ago. No regrets.
19 posted on 11/30/2002 7:36:09 PM PST by Jael
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: elbucko
Oh yeah, the ambulance chasers would be all over that, lol
20 posted on 11/30/2002 7:39:20 PM PST by Morrigan
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-62 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson