Rae Ellen Bichell
Of the 3000 adults surveyed in a recent NPR survey, 62% of
people said they had been vaccinated or plan to get the vaccination for the
flu. However for the other quarter of Americans, a series of reasons were
presented as to why they opt out of immunization. The most common reasons
included that 48% of those people believed that the vaccination was not
necessary for them, 16% were worried about side effects, and 14% were worried
the vaccination could infect them with the flu., and 8% believed the
vaccination would be ineffective.
The seasonal flu alone is responsible for approximately
200,000 hospitalizations in the United States annually, facing over 25,000
deaths each year. The CDC recommends that everyone who is older than 6 months
old and has no obvious allergies to the vaccine to become vaccinated because
it helps reduce the amount of flu that gets transmitted to other people. Even
if one person does not become ill by means of the ill, this person is still
susceptible to transmit the illness to someone else.
Shannon Stokley, a epidemiologist who works for the
immunization services department of the CDC, elucidates many common
misconceptions of people who do not want to get vaccinated: “The
virus that is included in the vaccine is either killed or weakened, so you just
cannot get the flu from the flu vaccine.”
A study found that flu vaccinations were
associated with a 71% reduction in flu-related hospitalizations amongst adults (http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2013/02/27/cid.cit124.full.pdf?keytype=ref&ijkey=Xp84ym72BYicJiV)
The Flu can also exacerbate heart disease and
asthma- all the more reason to get vaccinated Stokley states.
This begs the question- should children’s health be in the hands of uninformed, at times potentially negligent parents in full totality? Is there anyway we can reduce the risk uninformed parents instead of further polarizing those who are pro and anti-vaccinations? A step that governmental health agencies or even health cooperations in the private sector could take towards reducing the dichotomy would be to hold workshops, provide pamphlets, websites, and other resources that can inform the general population about the low risks and high benefits of getting vaccinated. I strongly believe that everyone should have the freedom to maintain autonomy of their own health/body- however when one's freedom and autonomy begins to impede on the health and safety of other individuals we must make the most well educated and well informed decisions possible. And as stated in the article, in the case of vaccinations, the current state of research favors the treatment; and that is the bottom line. Since making vaccinations mandatory seems unlikely to pass as legislation, the next pragmatic option is the assiduous advancement of these public campaigns either in the governmental or private sector in hopes of enhancing population education on the issue and subsequently increasing vaccination rates.
Of the 3000 adults surveyed in a recent NPR survey, 62% of
people said they had been vaccinated or plan to get the vaccination for the
flu. However for the other quarter of Americans, a series of reasons were
presented as to why they opt out of immunization. The most common reasons
included that 48% of those people believed that the vaccination was not
necessary for them, 16% were worried about side effects, and 14% were worried
the vaccination could infect them with the flu., and 8% believed the
vaccination would be ineffective.
The seasonal flu alone is responsible for approximately
200,000 hospitalizations in the United States annually, facing over 25,000
deaths each year. The CDC recommends that everyone who is older than 6 months
old and has no obvious allergies to the vaccine to become vaccinated because
it helps reduce the amount of flu that gets transmitted to other people. Even
if one person does not become ill by means of the ill, this person is still
susceptible to transmit the illness to someone else.
Shannon Stokley, a epidemiologist who works for the
immunization services department of the CDC, elucidates many common
misconceptions of people who do not want to get vaccinated: “The
virus that is included in the vaccine is either killed or weakened, so you just
cannot get the flu from the flu vaccine.”
A study found that flu vaccinations were
associated with a 71% reduction in flu-related hospitalizations amongst adults (http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2013/02/27/cid.cit124.full.pdf?keytype=ref&ijkey=Xp84ym72BYicJiV)
The Flu can also exacerbate heart disease and
asthma- all the more reason to get vaccinated Stokley states.
This begs the question- should children’s health be in the hands of uninformed, at times potentially negligent parents in full totality? Is there anyway we can reduce the risk uninformed parents instead of further polarizing those who are pro and anti-vaccinations? A step that governmental health agencies or even health cooperations in the private sector could take towards reducing the dichotomy would be to hold workshops, provide pamphlets, websites, and other resources that can inform the general population about the low risks and high benefits of getting vaccinated. I strongly believe that everyone should have the freedom to maintain autonomy of their own health/body- however when one's freedom and autonomy begins to impede on the health and safety of other individuals we must make the most well educated and well informed decisions possible. And as stated in the article, in the case of vaccinations, the current state of research favors the treatment; and that is the bottom line. Since making vaccinations mandatory seems unlikely to pass as legislation, the next pragmatic option is the assiduous advancement of these public campaigns either in the governmental or private sector in hopes of enhancing population education on the issue and subsequently increasing vaccination rates.