11/26/2007 - News

Look What Vaccines Have Done for Us

By: Robert W. Griffith, MD

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The introduction of national recommendations for vaccinations has led to a dramatic reduction in the designated diseases in the USA, according to a report in the Journal of the American Medical Association . Since widespread use of a vaccine, the annual number of cases has fallen by:

- more than 99% for diphtheria, smallpox, polio, measles, and rubella (German measles)

- more than 90% for pertussis (whooping cough), mumps, and tetanus

- more than 80% for hepatitis A and B, and varicella (chickenpox)

- about 35% for infections caused by the Strep. pneumoniae bacterium.


As the report concludes, the number of cases of most vaccine-preventable diseases is at an all-time low.

Even if you've never had a shot of any sort, vaccine programs have improved your life in many ways - less illness in the USA means increased productivity, and hence greater economic prosperity; saved health costs can be used for managing other diseases; and you've been exposed to fewer infectious disease carriers.

Looking forward, we can expect (or at least hope for) a vaccine against bird flu , and further development of vaccines against smoking , high blood pressure , Alzheimer's disease , and hay fever (i.e. 4 shots instead of months of desensitizing shots). And one day injections won't be needed to deliver the vaccines . . .

Source

HealthandAge Blog

Created on: 11/26/2007
Reviewed on: 11/26/2007

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