The Importance of Vaccines

I would like to discuss a very important and often misunderstood topic this month, vaccines. There is a lot of misinformation on the Internet, TV, and in various books. Vaccines are of vital importance to the overall health of a person and the population along with disease prevention. Vaccines have been used in the prevention of diseases for many years. Throughout history there have been many instances of large smallpox epidemics. During the 1700’s, the primary method of prevention was the concept of variolation, which involved placing dried scab material from those infected with smallpox on young children not yet infected. (The term variolation comes from the scientific name for smallpox, Variola.) This method would hopefully result in a mild infection in which the child would recover in two to four weeks as well as an acquired immunity to smallpox. Edward Jenner, who was a country doctor, noticed that the milkmaids who had been infected with cowpox on their hands did not become infected with smallpox after exposure.

In 1796 in England, using this idea as a theory, he took pus from a cowpox lesion on a milkmaid and introduced it into an eight year old boy’s arm. Six weeks later, he then took smallpox and did the same thing in two spots on the boy’s arm. The boy did not develop smallpox from this or subsequent exposures. This was the first use of a vaccine. In the late 1870’s, Louis Pasteur was studying fowl cholera, a highly contagious disease found in chickens and other fowl. Part of his studies included infecting chickens every few days with the live bacteria. However, at one point he took a vacation and let some of the cultures sit out. Upon his return, after injecting the chickens, he noticed they did not get sick.

He then infected them with a culture that had not been sitting out for a long period, and they still did not become sick from the disease. Pasteur realized this technique could work for other diseases as well. He then decided to study rabies and developed the first live virus vaccine in 1884. The work of Jenner and Pasteur paved the way for the bacterial and viral vaccines we use so often today to be developed.

There are currently four different types of vaccines: live virus, killed (inactivated) virus, toxoid, and biosynthetic. Live virus vaccines are made from a weakened (attenuated) form of the virus. These include chickenpox, measles, mumps, rubella, and the nasal flu vaccine. Killed vaccines are made from pieces of a virus or bacteria. The injected flu vaccine is an example of a killed vaccine. Toxoid vaccines contain a chemical or toxin made by the bacteria or virus. These include diphtheria and pertussis. Biosynthetic vaccines contain man-made substances that are similar to the virus or bacteria. An example of a biosynthetic vaccine is for Haemophilus influenza type B, which is a major cause of spinal meningitis. All vaccines work by teaching your body how to defend itself when exposed to a spe-cific germ. Your body uses whatever material is delivered via the vaccine to create protein molecules called antibodies. Eventually these antibodies do die. However, upon later ex-posures to the same bacteria or virus, the immune system through memory cells cre-ates the same antibodies as before to fight the infection. We need vaccines to protect us because as babies we have a small amount of immunity that has been passed from our mother, but this immunity soon goes away. Vaccines protect us from diseases that used to be very common, such as measles, mumps, rubella, whooping cough, meningitis, and polio. These diseases can cause serious and even life-threatening illnesses. Vaccines also work by providing “herd immunity” meaning that everyone who has received the vaccine is immune to that specific disease keeping the disease from being carried or spread. This herd immunity helps to protect those that are too young to receive vaccines or those who have immune systems that are too weak to handle the disease.

In the United States, we have multiple vaccines. Some of which are required to attend school and others which are recommended but optional. Required vaccines for babies and children are the following: measles, mumps, rubella (MMR); diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (DTap); Polio; Rotavirus; Pneumococcal, Meningococcal, Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib); Hepatitis B; Hepatitis A; and Varicella (chicken pox). The optional vaccines are the flu vaccine and the human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccine. Recommended vaccines for the older population are flu, pneumonia (both the pneumovax 23 – the one that has been recommended to those over 65 for many years and the Prevnar 13 – the one recommended for babies), and shingles.

Dr. Amanda Bailey, DO works at Catawba Valley Family Medicine – Claremont at 2890 South Lookout Street in downtown Claremont. For more information or to schedule an appointment with Dr. Bailey, call Catawba Valley Family Medicine – Claremont at 459-7324, or visit http://www.cvmgonline.org

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