Many Parents, Teens Unaware of an
`Optional'
But Valuable Vaccine
Vaccine
Protects Against Serious Meningococcal Infection
PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 10, 2003:-- Should older children and
teenagers receive a vaccination against a rare but deadly
infectious disease? An effective vaccine has been available
for 20 years against meningococcal infection, but the vaccine
is not routinely recommended by public health agencies and
parents are often unaware of it.
A nationally prominent vaccine expert proposes that physicians
and public health officials make a stronger effort to inform
parents and patients about the vaccine and its potential
benefits. He adds that health insurance companies should
consider paying for such vaccines when parents and patients
request them.
Given high health care costs and limited public resources,
implementing mass vaccination against meningococcal disease
may not be cost-effective public policy, but a parent's
individual decision about the vaccine is a different issue,
says Paul A. Offit, M.D., chief of Infectious Diseases and
director of the Vaccine Education Center at The Children's
Hospital of Philadelphia. Dr. Offit is the lead author of a
commentary in the Dec. 11 issue of the New England Journal of
Medicine.
"Although the meningococcal vaccine may be an inefficient use
of public health resources, the decision to receive the
vaccine could save lives and prevent the devastating effects
of meningococcal infection," writes Dr. Offit. Dr. Offit's
co-author is Georges Peter, M.D., of the Division of Pediatric
Infectious Diseases, Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, R.I. TOP
Invasive meningococcal infection strikes an estimated 2,200 to
3,000 U.S. patients annually. Some 10 percent of those
patients die, sometimes within hours of the first signs of
illness, from meningitis (inflammation of the brain's lining)
or sepsis (bloodstream infection). Survivors may suffer
hearing loss, seizures, mental retardation or limb amputation.
The contagious disease is most likely to strike infants under
the age of one - for whom the current vaccine is,
unfortunately, not effective. The infection may also affect
older children and adults in close proximity to one another.
Outbreaks that occur in college dormitories, schools and
child-care centers may cause considerable anxiety in a
community.
The meningococcal vaccine is routinely given to military
recruits. The Centers for Disease Control and the American
Academy of Pediatrics recommend that students entering college
be informed of the risks of the disease and benefits of the
vaccine. TOP
However, neither agency routinely recommends that the vaccine
be given, and not all health plans reimburse the cost
(approximately $80). Thus, parents may face the decision of
whether to pay out of pocket to vaccinate their child against
a one in 125,000 chance of contracting meningococcal
infection.
Many parents may not even be aware of the meningococcal
vaccine, because it is not routinely recommended. The authors
urge physicians to inform parents and patients about the
vaccine during routine adolescent visits. They also recommend
that physical examination forms required for school, camp and
sports activities include information about the vaccine and
that school nurses and parent-teacher organizations
disseminate information through the schools. TOP
The authors suggest that health maintenance organizations and
health insurance companies consider paying for these
vaccinations when parents or patients request them. "The
meningococcal vaccine is safe and effective, and is the only
currently available method to protect against invasive
meningococcal disease," added Dr. Offit.
About Paul A.
Offit, M.D.:
Paul A. Offit, M.D. is the director of the Vaccine Education
Center and chief of Infectious Diseases at The Children's
Hospital of Philadelphia. An internationally recognized expert
in virology, immunology and vaccine safety and co-author of
the book "Vaccines: What You Should Know."
Source: The
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia TOP |