Immunization issues for the 21st century.

Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol

Department of Pediatrics University of Illinois, College of Medicine at Rockford, Rockford, Illinois 61107, USA.

Published: June 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • Vaccination and immunization have significantly reduced vaccine-preventable diseases in the U.S. and globally, thanks to established immunization schedules and mandates for school entry.
  • Despite this progress, challenges remain, including missed vaccination opportunities, misinformation from anti-vaccine movements, and some parental misconceptions.
  • Future advancements may include combination vaccines, new disease targets, improved delivery methods, and systems to track vaccinations, reinforcing that the benefits of vaccines greatly outweigh their risks.

Article Abstract

Objective: Review and discuss major issues of vaccination and immunization. The development and application of vaccination and immunization is one of the most remarkable successes of the 20th century. This is true both in the United States and worldwide. In the United States, a number of vaccine-preventable diseases have been all but eliminated through the development of a recommended childhood immunization schedule by governmental and nongovernmental organizations, education of providers about these recommendations, and enforcement of these recommendations by school and day care entry mandates. Despite these successes, vaccine-preventable diseases continue to occur, in part because of missed opportunities by health care providers, antivaccine forces empowered by misguided mass media, and parental ignorance. Important aspects of the 2002 recommended childhood immunization schedule are reviewed, including: birth dose hepatitis B, diphtheria underimmunization and tetanus overimmunization, increasing pertussis disease, the success of conjugate vaccines, the change in poliovirus vaccines, measles vaccine and autism, the safety of varicella vaccine, and adult vaccination recommendations. Finally, future prospects for vaccination and immunization are discussed, including: combination vaccines, vaccines against new diseases such as rotavirus, new routes of delivery of immunizing agents, the use of computerized vaccine registries to prevent missed opportunities, and vaccines against bioterrorism agents.

Conclusions: A careful analysis of risk and benefit suggests that the benefit of vaccination far outweighs the risks from the utilization of immunizing agents. Vaccination delayed may be protection denied. The bottom line is that vaccines are good and disease is bad.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1081-1206(10)61660-2DOI Listing

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