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Wednesday, October 9, 2013

What are some of the myths – and facts – about vaccination?

Online Q&A
April 2013

Q: What are some of the myths – and facts – about vaccination?

A: Myth 1: Better hygiene and sanitation will make diseases disappear – vaccines are not necessary. FALSE

Fact 1: The diseases we can vaccinate against will return if we stop vaccination programmes. While better hygiene, hand washing and clean water help protect people from infectious diseases, many infections can spread regardless of how clean we are. If people are not vaccinated, diseases that have become uncommon, such as polio and measles, will quickly reappear.

Myth 2: Vaccines have several damaging and long-term side-effects that are yet unknown. Vaccination can even be fatal. FALSE

Fact 2: Vaccines are very safe. Most vaccine reactions are usually minor and temporary, such as a sore arm or mild fever. Very serious health events are extremely rare and are carefully monitored and investigated. You are far more likely to be seriously injured by a vaccine-preventable disease than by a vaccine. For example, in the case of polio, the disease can cause paralysis, measles can cause encephalitis and blindness, and some vaccine-preventable diseases can even result in death. While any serious injury or death caused by vaccines is one too many, the benefits of vaccination greatly outweigh the risk, and many, many more injuries and deaths would occur without vaccines.

Myth 3: The combined vaccine against diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (whooping cough) and the vaccine against poliomyelitis cause sudden infant death syndrome. FALSE

Fact 3: There is no causal link between the administering of the vaccines and sudden infant death, however, these vaccines are administered at a time when babies can suffer sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).,. In other words, the SIDS deaths are co-incidental to vaccination and would have occurred even if no vaccinations had been given. It is important to remember that these four diseases are life-threatening and babies who are not vaccinated against them are at serious risk of death or serious disability.

Myth 4: Vaccine-preventable diseases are almost eradicated in my country, so there is no reason to be vaccinated. FALSE

Fact 4: Although vaccine preventable diseases have become uncommon in many countries, the infectious agents that cause them continue to circulate in some parts of the world. In a highly inter-connected world, these agents can cross geographical borders and infect anyone who is not protected. In western Europe, for example, measles outbreaks have occurred in unvaccinated populations in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom since 2005. So two key reasons to get vaccinated are to protect ourselves and to protect those around us. Successful vaccination programmes, like successful societies, depend on the cooperation of every individual to ensure the good of all. We should not rely on people around us to stop the spread of disease; we, too, must do what we can.

Myth 5: Vaccine-preventable childhood illnesses are just an unfortunate fact of life. FALSE

Fact 5: Vaccine preventable diseases do not have to be ‘facts of life’. Illnesses such as measles, mumps and rubella are serious and can lead to severe complications in both children and adults, including pneumonia, encephalitis, blindness, diarrhoea, ear infections, congenital rubella syndrome (if a woman becomes infected with rubella in early pregnancy), and death. All these diseases and suffering can be prevented with vaccines. Failure to vaccinate against these diseases leaves children unnecessarily vulnerable.

Myth 6: Giving a child more than one vaccine at a time can increase the risk of harmful side-effects, which can overload the child’s immune system. FALSE

Fact 6: Scientific evidence shows that giving several vaccines at the same time has no adverse effect on a child’s immune system. Children are exposed to several hundred foreign substances that trigger an immune response every day. The simple act of eating food introduces new antigens into the body, and numerous bacteria live in the mouth and nose. A child is exposed to far more antigens from a common cold or sore throat than they are from vaccines. Key advantages of having several vaccines at once is fewer clinic visits, which saves time and money, and children are more likely to complete the recommended vaccinations on schedule. Also, when it is possible to have a combined vaccination, e.g. for measles, mumps and rubella, that means fewer injections.

Myth 7: Influenza is just a nuisance, and the vaccine isn’t very effective. FALSE

Fact 7: Influenza is much more than a nuisance. It is a serious disease that kills 300 000-500 000 people worldwide every year. Pregnant women, small children, elderly people with poor health and anyone with a chronic condition, like asthma or heart disease, are at higher risk for severe infection and death. Vaccinating pregnant women has the added benefit of protecting their newborns (there is currently no vaccine for babies under six months). Vaccination offers immunity to the three most prevalent strains circulating in any given season. It is the best way to reduce your chances of severe flu and of spreading it to others. Avoiding the flu means avoiding extra medical care costs and lost income from missing days of work or school.

Myth 8: It is better to be immunized through disease than through vaccines. FALSE

Fact 8: Vaccines interact with the immune system to produce an immune response similar to that produced by the natural infection, but they do not cause the disease or put the immunized person at risk of its potential complications. In contrast, the price paid for getting immunity through natural infection might be mental retardation from Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib), birth defects from rubella, liver cancer from hepatitis B virus, or death from measles.

Myth 9: Vaccines contain mercury which is dangerous. FALSE

Fact 9: Thiomersal is an organic, mercury-containing compound added to some vaccines as a preservative. It is the most widely-used preservative for vaccines that are provided in multi-dose vials. There is no evidence to suggest that the amount of thiomersal used in vaccines poses a health risk.

Myth 10: Vaccines cause autism FALSE

Fact 10: The 1998 study which raised concerns about a possible link between measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine and autism was later found to be seriously flawed, and the paper has been retracted by the journal that published it. Unfortunately, its publication set off a panic that led to dropping immunization rates, and subsequent outbreaks of these diseases. There is no evidence of a link between MMR vaccine and autism or autistic disorders.

sumber: www.who.com

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

[INFO] 7 Vaksin yang Tidak Boleh Terlewatkan...

dr. Febbiana (Rumah Vaksinasi Cibubur) sedang memvaksinasi baby Kiel
TEMPO.CO, Jakarta - Vaksin atau imunisasi umumnya dikaitkan dengan anak-anak. Jarang terlihat, orang dewasa giat melakukan vaksinasi. Bahkan, menurut laporan terbaru dari Universitas Michigan, 61 persen orang dewasa tidak tahu kapan mereka terakhir divaksin.

Hanya 20 persen orang dewasa mengatakan mereka menerima vaksin dalam 10 tahun terakhir. Ini merupakan batas waktu kekuatan vaksin dalam tubuh manusia. Padahal, vaksin harus selalu diperhatikan.

Berikut 7 vaksin yang harus selalu diperhatikan, seperti dikutip dalam situs Women’s Health Magazine, Jumat, 28 Juni 2013.

1. Vaksin Flu
Flu, memang terdengar sebagai penyakit yang ringan. Namun, gejala flu dapat mengggangu aktivitas. Sejak flu selalu berkembang dari tahun ke tahun, vaksin flu dianjurkan dilakukan setiap setahun sekali. Pada wanita hamil, vaksin ini dapat mengurangi risiko keguguran dan komplikasi lainnya.

2. Vaksin HPV
Vaksin ini melindungi kita dari virus human papiloma. Idealnya, vaksin ini diberikan sebelum usia 26 tahun, terutama sebelum terjadi kontak seksual.

3. Vaksin meningokokus
Vaksin ini dapat mencegah penyakit meningitis yang mematikan dan datang tiba-tiba. Idealnya, vaksin ini diberikan menjelang usia remaja. Namun, beberapa ahli menyarankan pemberian vaksin ini dapat dilakukan sebelum mengunjungi negara endemik meningitis, seperti Afrika. Selain itu, vaksin ini juga harus diberikan pada seseorang yang limpanya diangkat atau rusak.

4.Vaksin MMR.
Semua anak diwajibkan untuk mendapatkan vaksin MMR (campak, gondok, rubella). Namun, orang dewasa lupa apakah sudah mendapatkan vaksin ini atau belum, uji laboratorium dapat menjawabnya. Vaksin ini tidak perlu berulang. Cukup satu kali seumur hidup.

5. Vaksin Varicella.
Vaksin ini mencegah seseorang menderita penyakit cacat air. Jika Anda lupa, apakah pernah menderita cacar air atau bahkan tidak memerlukan vaksin ini maka sebaiknya Anda memeriksakan diri apakah Anda perlu perlindungan vaksin.

6. Vaksin hepatitis B
Umumnya, hepatitis B dilakukan pada anak-anak. Namun, jika orang dewasa belum menerimanya, vaksin ini juga tetap harus dilakukan. Orang yang memiliki banyak pasangan seks, penderita penyakiit hati dan ginjal kronis, penderita diabetes di bawah usia 60 tahun, petugas kesehatan, pengidap HIV, dan pelancong ke negara endemik hepatitis B, sangat disarankan untuk tidak melewatkan vaksinasi ini.

7. Vaksin hepatitis A
Hepatitis A cukup dilakukan sekali seumur hidup. Jika saat kanak-kanak belum mendapatkan vaksin ini maka saat dewasa vaksin ini harus disuntikkan, terutama pada penderita penyakit hati kronis, pasien dengan konsentrat faktor pembekuan, dan pelancong yang akan bepergian ke negara endemik hepatitis A.

sumber : www.tempo.co.id

Monday, June 3, 2013

Bila Orang Tua Tak Dapat Vaksin MMR, Bayi akan Lahir Buta dan Tuli

Jakarta, Vaksinasi amat penting diberikan sebagai tindakan pencegahan terhadap beberapa jenis penyakit. Apabila dilewatkan, dampaknya tak hanya menyerang diri sendiri, tapi juga keturunan. Misalnya kasus wabah rubella di Inggris yang berisiko membuat bayi-bayi di sana terlahir buta.

Profesor Colin Blakemore, mantan kepala eksekutif dari Medical Research Council di Inggris, mengatakan bahwa wanita hamil yang terinfeksi rubella akan berisiko tinggi melahirkan bayi dengan kelainan buta, tuli dan gangguan jantung.

Pernyataan prof Blakemore ini mengacu pada wabah rubella atau campak Jerman yang melanda South Wales, Inggris. Sampai saat ini, setidaknya 1.356 orang yang terinfeksi. Menurut Blakemore, ini barulah tahap pertama dari dampak jangka panjang yang bisa ditimbulkan oleh wabah rubella dan gondok.

"Jangan lupa bahwa bayi yang tidak diberi vaksin di MMR pada puncak krisisnya sekarang berada di masa awal remaja. Tak butuh waktu lama bagi gadis-gadis ini untuk hamil. Mereka menghadapi konsekuensi dari kurangnya perlindungan terhadap penyakit lain," kata Prof Blakemore seperti dilansir Telegraph, Minggu (1/6/2013).

Pemberian vaksin MMR diketahui bisa mencegah penyakit mump (gondongan), measles (campak) dan rubella (campak Jerman). Vaksin ini biasanya diberikan pada anak berusia di atas 1 tahun. Di Inggris, ternyata pemberian vaksin MMR masih menemui kendala.

Diperkirakan lebih dari 300.000 anak-anak yang kini berusia 10 - 16 tahun di sana belum divaksinasi. Masih banyaknya masyarakat yang menolak vaksinasi disebabkan karena pernyataan seorang peneliti di Inggris bernama Andrew Wakefield yang mengaitkan vaksinasi MMR dengan risiko autisme.

"Gondok dapat membuat pria menjadi mandul. Wanita yang terinfeksi Rubella memiliki 20 persen kemungkinan mengalami aborsi. Sebagian besar bayi yang bisa bertahan hidup menderita ketulian, kebutaan dan sindrom kelainan jantung yang tak dapat disembuhkan akibat rubella," terang prof Blakemore.

Lembaga bentukan Departemen Kesehatan Inggris bernama Public Health England sudah mengkampanyekan dukungannya terhadap vaksin MMR. Mereka juga mendesak para remaja yang belum divaksinasi untuk segara disuntik vaksin MMR.

Sumber : Detik Health