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posted by janrinok on Wednesday March 04 2015, @11:11PM   Printer-friendly
from the and-the-oscar-for-vaccine-education-goes-to... dept.

Catherine Saint Louis reports at the NYT that according to a survey of 534 primary care physicians, a wide majority of pediatricians and family physicians acquiesce to parents who wish to delay vaccinating their children, even though the doctors feel these decisions put children at risk for measles, whooping cough and other ailments. One-third of doctors said they acquiesced “often” or “always”; another third gave in only “sometimes.” According to Dr. Paul A. Offit, such deference is in keeping with today’s doctoring style, which values patients as partners. “At some level, you’re ceding your expertise, and you want the patient to participate and make the decision,” says Offit, a pediatrician specializing in infectious diseases. “It is sad that we are willing to let children walk out of our offices vulnerable to potentially fatal infections. There’s a fatigue here, and there’s a kind of learned helplessness.”

Part of the problem is the lack of a proven strategy to guide physicians in counselling parents. “Unfortunately, we don’t have a solid evidence base in terms of how to communicate to patients about vaccines,” says Saad Omer adding that although he does not sanction the use of alternative vaccine schedules, he understands why primary care physicians keep treating these patients — just as doctors do not kick smokers out of their practices when they fail to quit. Dr. Allison Kempe, the study’s lead author and a pediatrician at Children’s Hospital Colorado, thinks the time has come to acknowledge that the idea that “vaccine education can be handled in a brief wellness visit is untenable” and says that we may need pro-vaccine parents and perhaps even celebrities to star in marketing campaigns to help “reinforce vaccination as a social norm.” "Whether the topic is autism or presidential politics," says Frank Bruni, "celebrity trumps authority and obviates erudition."

 
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  • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Sunday March 08 2015, @10:02PM

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Sunday March 08 2015, @10:02PM (#154635)

    Even in my own limited experience I have had occasion to disagree with doctors whose skill and experience I continue to hold in high regard. There can be different priorities held by a doctor and the patient, and not necessarily in the way one would expect.

    Yes, but with anti-vax, this isn't a question of different priorities, but rather complete disagreement about basic science.

    Now, I will grant that the slower vaccine schedules, while more costly and time-consuming (though I do think a decent doctor's office should be able to get people in and out more quickly for subsequent shots if they would organize it properly), can be considered an OK compromise in the interest of avoiding bodily reactions, since after all, different people's bodies are different and react differently to things.

    My "stop going to doctors" bit was in response to actual anti-vaxxers (I do not consider people who want a little bit of time between injections to be "anti-vaxxers"). These people aren't worried about bodily reactions to too many vaccines at once (in their view), anti-vaxxers actually don't believe vaccinations are necessary or should be done. The altered-schedule people simply disagree about about the schedule and worry about having a reaction from so many vaccines at once; the anti-vax people disagree with all the basic science about vaccines and their efficacy and herd immunity. To me, that's a big, big difference. If they completely disagree with medical science that dates back almost a century now, then why are they bothering going to doctors at all? (The altered-schedule people are only disagreeing with medical science that's maybe a decade old or so; they didn't give so many vaccines when I was a kid.) So, I can understand someone being skeptical about pumping their kid with so many vaccines at once, when it wasn't normal a few decades ago. But you have to be a complete moron to think that risking your kid catching polio, tetanus, etc. is a good idea. Any elderly person can tell you the horrors of those diseases.

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  • (Score: 1) by Fauxlosopher on Sunday March 08 2015, @10:27PM

    by Fauxlosopher (4804) on Sunday March 08 2015, @10:27PM (#154647) Journal

    I can understand someone being skeptical about pumping their kid with so many vaccines at once, when it wasn't normal a few decades ago. But you have to be a complete moron to think that risking your kid catching polio, tetanus, etc. is a good idea

    We agree, and the only caveat from me is that, in a nation of free humans, each individual nonetheless has the right to be a complete moron. Such humans own their bodies, and while free human children are a wonderfully snarled practical pickle, until there is at least an actual case of one individual harming another, there is no crime. (And what should most people care about that moron anway - they got vaccinated, right?) Our moronic politicians aren't helping matters, either, with criminal behavior like pushing mandatory HPV vaccines on kids, or making money off the health of soldiers with the completely ineffective against aerosolized anthrax vaccine. When liars lie about some vaccines, a not completely unexpected consequence is that the liars are distrusted even when presenting truth.

    Known-good vaccines are like seatbelt laws: a good idea, stupid to disregard, but utterly void of principle (and for free people, legality) should a law tried to be made to mandate their use. I await fresh-underwear and brushed-teeth laws with bated breath.