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Vaccine Scares Professional Response

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'Another cause, is the charge against vaccination of producing various new ... 2001. HPE (new edition out shortly) Websites: WHO; CDC; Bandolier ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Vaccine Scares Professional Response


1
Vaccine Scares-Professional Response
  • Helen Bedford
  • Institute of Child Health
  • London

2
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3
  • Another cause, is the charge against vaccination
    of producing various new diseases of frightful
    and monstrous appearance . . . . . . . . . . . .
    Publications with such representations have been
    widely circulated, and though they originate
    either in gross ignorance, or in wilful
    misrepresentation, yet have they lessened the
    confidence of many, . . . in vaccination . . . .
    Report of the Royal College of Physicians

    April 1807

4
Vaccine safety concerns
  • Pertussis vaccine and brain damage
  • MMR vaccine autism and bowel disease
  • Multiple sclerosis hepatitis B vaccine
  • Mercury in vaccines neurological damage
  • Multiple vaccines immune dysfunction
  • Contraceptives in tetanus vaccine

5
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6
The Independent. 27th Sept 2003
7
Effects of MMR safety concerns
  • Decline in MMR vaccine uptake
  • 92 in 1995
  • 78 in 2003 (68 in London 77 in Wales)
  • Parents requesting separate antigens
  • Local outbreaks of disease-2001/2
  • Measles nearing endemic levels in UK-2003
  • Small decrease in uptake of other vaccines

8
Determinants of vaccine uptake
  • Immunisation services
  • accessible, well organised
  • Health professionals
  • well informed, enthusiastic
  • Parents
  • attitudes to vaccines and diseases

9
Parents attitudes-the decision to immunise
  • dynamic process
  • range of influences
  • personal/family experience
  • media
  • professionals
  • vaccine advocacy groups internet

10
Personal/Family experience
  • family member damaged by vaccine
  • personal experience of disease
  • anecdotes about or personal contact with child
    with autism
  • personal views on health and medicine-increase in
    alternative/complementary medicine
  • own experience of the immunisation process

11
Immunisation process
  • mothers-emotional distress re injections
  • value health professional who engages them and
    their baby
  • lack of information
  • And if you kind of ask them any questions they
    are really eager to get rid of you.
  • adverse experiences-deferral of future visits and
    defaulting
  • Harrington et al., 2000.

12
Immunisation processparents views of health
professionals
  • value advice from health visitors and GPs
  • highly value HPs who discuss issues openly
  • want more information-from independent source
  • appreciate time and one to one advice

13
Immunisation processparents views of health
professionals
  • felt child not considered as an individual
    willing to have one autistic child rather than
    outbreak
  • dont get written information
  • health professionals are inconsistent
  • feel pressurised into immunising
  • loss of confidence and trust in health
    professionals and government agencies (BSE)
  • GP targets

14
Parents-attitudes
  • range of influences
  • personal/family experience
  • media
  • professionals
  • vaccine advocacy groups internet

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16
Media triggers
  • Secret and cover up
  • Human interest
  • High profile personalities
  • Conflict
  • Suggests further problems
  • Many people exposed
  • Strong visual impact
  • Links to sex or crime (perhaps not!)

17
Vaccine scares-the effect of the media
  • protracted campaign against MMR by South Wales
    Evening Post
  • July-Sept 1998 uptake declined by 13.6 in area
    covered by this newspaper compared with same
    period in 1997
  • In rest of Wales for similar periods decline was
    2.4
  • Mason Donnelly. J Epid Comm Health 2000 54
    473

18
MMR in the media
  • Recent study of media coverage of various
    scientific issues
  • Coverage of MMR by media suggests
  • a divided scientific community with two
    conflicting bodies of research
  • The reality is a very flimsy link with autism and
    the great weight of evidence failing to find a
    link.
  • ESRC 2003

19
MMR in the media
  • Mark Popescu- Editor of the Ten Oclock News
  • strictly on the level of risk we probably
    over reported MMR.but I am also governed by
    whether the Government is involved.. whether
    the CMO is involved
  • Several people interviewed pointed to the power
    of the Daily Mail in particular and said the
    story would run across all media as long as Daily
    Mail keeps running the story.
  • Kings Fund 2003

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21
Parents-attitudes
  • range of influences
  • personal/family experiences
  • media
  • professionals
  • vaccine advocacy groups internet

22
Health professionals
  • Attitudes Knowledge
  • lack of training support for health visitors
    and practice nurses
  • patchy, not always included in basic training
  • updating lacking
  • studies consistently show poorly informed
  • contraindications
  • need for second dose MMR
  • significant proportion do not immunise own
    children

23
Parents-attitudes
  • range of influences
  • personal/family experiences
  • media
  • professionals
  • vaccine advocacy (activist) groups

24
Vaccine advocacy groups
  • set up to
  • provide support to parents who believe child
    damaged by vaccines
  • in response to lack of information
  • Some e.g. JABS use media very effectively
  • difficult to engage a dialogue
  • information can be inaccurate misleading

25
Resource list provided in recent article on MMR
in Junior
  • Vaccination Information Service (VAN UK)
  • MMR The Facts
  • National Autistic Society
  • The Informed Parent
  • Allergy-Induced Autism
  • Alexander Harris
  • World Health Organization
  • JABS

26
Other sources of information
  • VAN UK (Vaccination Awareness Network)
  • Your child will receive 18 vaccines by the time
    it is 16 weeks old (more for some ethnic groups),
    read the VAN UK factsheets to see how many
    chemicals, metals and viruses are being put into
    your new baby and what side effects they can
    cause!! Is this a risk worth taking for diseases
    where the incidence and/or death rates declined
    by over 90 before any jabs where introduced?
  •  

27
Complications of 1st Dose of MMR Vaccine v
Measles disease
per million children
28
Autism-a fright factor-1
  • Involuntary
  • Inequitably distributed
  • Inescapable
  • Unfamiliar or novel source
  • Man-made rather than natural
  • Hidden and irreversible damage
  • Small children

29
Autism-a fright factor-2
  • Dread disease/condition
  • Identifiable victims
  • Poorly understood by science
  • Subject to contradictory statements
  • Apparent unexplained increase in prevalence
  • No effective treatment
  • Loss of acquired skills

30
Parents perceptions of risk
  • If he has whooping cough, he catches it and
    thats
  • that-but if he has the injection (and was brain-
  • damaged), Id feel responsible.
  • Because I have actually chosen positively to
    go down that course of action, and that results
    in a injury to them. It is just unthinkable
  • you hear about autismyoure praying before you
    go in and when you come out

31
Professional response
  • Training and support for health professionals
  • standards for training being developed by HPA
  • not just the facts but how to talk with parents
    and answer challenging questions
  • updates important

32
Professional Response
  • Information needs to be out there
  • e.g. MMR myth buster pack
  • Green Book (now on the Web)
  • Tailored to individual needs
  • Tiered
  • verbal
  • leaflets
  • fact sheets videos
  • scientific papers

33
Professional Response
  • Advise parents on accessing and using available
    resources
  • guidance on which websites and interpreting
    information
  • who produced it?
  • presented in an unbiased form?
  • vested interests?
  • signpost to original data?
  • dated?
  • uncertainties acknowledged?

34
Professional Response
  • Be familiar with other sources of information
  • Informed parent
  • JABS
  • What Doctors Dont Tell You
  • equipped to answer particular issues, concerns
    raised

35
Professional Response
  • BUT facts are not enough
  • Delivery-empathetic,
  • Specific to concerns
  • Immunisation advice specialist shared between
    practices?
  • Imaginative ways of working with parents
  • groups

36
Professional Response
  • Communicating risks of vaccines v diseases
  • considerable research into communicating
    risk-little focused specifically on vaccines
  • percentages rather than figures?
  • use examples that have real meaning
  • pregnancy childbirth
  • one case in a small town
  • use personal experience of seeing the diseases

37
Professional response
  • Be proactive with media
  • write letters/articles for local and national
    papers
  • get media trained
  • offer self as local spokesperson for radio and TV
  • but know your limitations
  • work with pro vaccine advocacy groups

38
Conclusions
  • Parents strongly held beliefs and attitudes
    shaped by numerous influences
  • Decline in MMR rates serious but not as
    significant as media would suggest and majority
    of parents still choose MMR
  • Health professionals viewed as main source of
    information for many parents
  • A well informed confident health professional can
    have a major influence on parents views

39
Resources
  • MMR mythbuster pack
  • MMR the facts
  • http//www.mmrthefacts.nhs.uk/
  • Drug and Therapeutics Bulletin 2003 41 (4). MMR
    vaccine-how effective and how safe (independent
    review by Consumers Association). Also leaflet
    for parents.
  • Bedford H., Elliman D. Childhood Immunisation
    The Facts. 2001. HPE (new edition out shortly)
  • Websites WHO CDC Bandolier
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