Charlotte Haug, MD, PhD, MSc JAMA. 2009;302(7):795-796. When do physicians know enough about the beneficial effectsof a new medical intervention to start recommending or usingit? When is the available information about harmful adverseeffects sufficient to conclude that the risks outweigh the potentialbenefits? If in doubt, should physicians err on the side ofcaution or on the side […]
Postlicensure safety surveillance for quadrivalent human papillomavirus recombinant vaccine.
JAMA. 2009 Aug 19;302(7):750-7. Abstract CONTEXT: In June 2006, the Food and Drug Administration licensed the quadrivalent human papillomavirus (types 6, 11, 16, and 18) recombinant vaccine (qHPV) in the United States for use in females aged 9 to 26 years; the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices then recommended qHPV for routine vaccination of […]
Reports of Autoimmune Disorders After HPV Vaccine Raise Questions
From Medscape Medical News September 23, 2009 (Düsseldorf, Germany) — Investigators have identified cases of autoimmune disorders after immunization with the quadrivalent vaccine Gardasil. The Merck product is designed to prevent infection with several types of human papillomavirus. Presenting here at the 25th Congress of the European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple […]
Report of Motor Neuron Disease After HPV Vaccine
From Medscape Medical News October 28, 2009 (Baltimore, Maryland) — Investigators are reporting a case of motor neuron disease after immunization with the quadrivalent vaccine Gardasil. The Merck product is designed to prevent infection with several types of human papillomavirus. Presenting here at the 134th annual meeting of the American Neurological Association, researchers describe a […]
The Age-Old Struggle against the Antivaccinationists
New England Journal of Medicine
Gregory A. Poland, M.D., and Robert M. Jacobson, M.D.
N Engl J Med 2011; 364:97-99
January 13, 2011
Since the introduction of the first vaccine, there has been opposition to vaccination. In the 19th century, despite clear evidence of benefit, routine inoculation with cowpox to protect people against smallpox was hindered by a burgeoning antivaccination movement. The result was ongoing smallpox outbreaks and needless deaths. In 1910, Sir William Osler publicly expressed his frustration with the irrationality of the antivaccinationists by offering to take 10 vaccinated and 10 unvaccinated people with him into the next severe smallpox epidemic, to care for the latter when they inevitably succumbed to the disease, and ultimately to arrange for the funerals of those among them who would die (see the Medical Notes section of the Dec. 22, 1910, issue of the Journal). A century later, smallpox has been eradicated through vaccination, but we are still contending with antivaccinationists.
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