Strollerderby

Kid Dies After Parents Said No to Hib Vaccine

Posted by JeanneSager

It's a disease entirely preventable, but a sudden burst in diagnoses of Hib (Haemophilus influenzae type B) in Minnesota kids has led to the death of one seven-month-old. His parents, along with those of two other infected children were in the growing group who have opted out on vaccinating their kids. 

The fourth child infected was in the middle of the three-part vaccination process, while the fifth had an immune deficiency. 

Despite the low number of infections, the CDC has gotten involved, concerned that parents choosing not to vaccinate their kids are putting other children at risk. Five kids, they say, is the highest number of cases in one area since 1992, when vaccinating against Hib became common practice in pediatricians' offices. 

"The situation is of concern," Dr. Anne Schuchat, director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Disease at the CDC, told CNN. "It could be happening elsewhere, and of course it's tragic that one of the children actually died from a preventable disease."

Since vaccinating against Hib became the norm for American children in the early 1990s, the CDC has seen a ninety nine percent drop in reported cases (from as much as twenty thousand before vaccinations).The disease primarily strikes kids under five, and it kills one in twenty. Of those who survive, ten to twenty percent end up with brain damage, many more go deaf.

What's troubling to me are the children infected despite their parents proper attempts to vaccinate - because other parents refusal to do so has allowed the disease to once again flourish. It's something very few people in the anti-vaccine community focus on - what happens to everyone else's kids. They argue that they are protecting their children from supposed toxins in the immunizations. But as a recent study proving the efficacy of the meningitis vaccine points out, the "herd immunity" provided by immunizing children protects the community as a whole.

By refusing to immunize their kids, these parents are putting society as a whole at risk - including the fourth and fifth kid in Minnesota, who were at special risks.

Image: CNN

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Comments

 

Mark said:

This is so incredibly sad--especially since this and many other disease are nearly 100% preventable--when you vaccinate.

I understand that as parents we all have the right to make the decisions that we feel are best for our kids, but when it comes to vaccinations, please remember to get your facts from scientists and the medical community, not a former Playmate.

January 26, 2009 10:48 AM
 

gpgirl said:

Thank you! Finally, an article showing how vaccines are important without any qualifier at the beginning. ("There is a lot of bad news about vaccines, and finally here is some good news...") For anyone who understands science in the least bit, this is not at all surprising. As more people do not get their kids vaccinated, more of these diseases will occur.

@Mark - very well said. I liked that the Skeptics Guide to the Universe (a podcast by actual scientists - gasp!) named Jenny McCarthy the 2008 Douchebag of the Year. In that particular podcast, they mention how her "activism" now has a body count.

January 26, 2009 12:00 PM
 

WonderingWilla said:

Great post, would that this were one of the main articles on the site instead of a blog thing.  I don't think that a discussion about this would change the minds of the die hard types, but I do think that maybe the Sears influenced alternativers/delayers might have second thoughts.

January 26, 2009 3:35 PM
 

Sara said:

At the risk of being inflammatory, if some parents can opt their children out of immunizations THEN maybe schools should opt out of teaching underimmunized children who are vectors for disease.

January 26, 2009 7:28 PM
 

WonderingWilla said:

Nothing inflammatory there.  I agree.

January 27, 2009 8:36 PM
 

Mae said:

Many school systems do opt out of teaching underimmunized children and even fine the parents. However, this doesn't always help when many of those parents don't have insurance and cannot take a day or two off of work to sit in line for the free immunizations at the local clinic. The parents who opt out completely often have religious or other government approved exemptions.

January 28, 2009 7:26 PM
 

Finch said:

If vaccines actually work, then why worry? Just cover your own ass, as well as your kids and let the "underimmunized" kill themselves off. Oh, right what about those kids that got sick "despite their parents proper attempts to vaccinate them", well what about the children that are infected via vaccinated children, and those harmed by the vaccines themselves.

January 30, 2009 10:20 PM
 

laur said:

As a bacterial mengitis survivor (from the 70's when there wasn't a vaccine), and now a parent, I couldn't make any choice than to vaccinate.  my parents suffered through weeks of my hospitalization, where they were told I would suffer both physical and mental problems, likely be deaf and/or blind, and that was the upshot - if I lived.  I beat the odds for some reason, and there is no way I would want to subject my child or my family to the same issues when there is a preventive technique! I've researched this particular vaccine in many ways and the possible side effects are nothing compared to being told your child might die any moment.  That said, this vaccine can't prevent all types of mengitis, but I'll take what I can get.  

February 1, 2009 8:18 PM
 

mchaos said:

Vaccines are not always 100% effective.  They could be a one in a million chance it doesn't work for you.  If it works for everyone else though, you can't get the disease because it isn't there to get.  Unvaccinated people put the tiny percentage of people for whom vaccines may not fully protect at risk.  I don't think I'd want my kids to go to a school that allowed opted out kids.  I would feel like I was taking unnecessary risks with their lives.

February 8, 2009 1:59 AM

About JeanneSager

Jeanne Sager is a writer who lives in upstate New York with her husband, daughter, a dog and too many cats. She refuses to believe motherhood comes with pumpkin appliqued sweaters, and she';s not ready to apologize for having only one child. She writes about raising her kid in her own hometown and the mom stuff she's not embarrassed to own at her blog, Inside Out (http://jeannesager.blogspot.com), she's contributing editor of Grand Magazine, and she's a regular essayist here on Babble

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