The Post

Why vaccines are safe and vital

DR MELINDA SUCHARD This is an edited version of an article that first appeared on the NICD’s website. Suchard wrote in her capacity as the head of NICD’s Centre for Vaccines and Immunology at that time. For more information, see www.nicd.ac.za

VACCINES are widely acknowledged to be the most successful medical advance ever. Vaccines continue to save hundreds of thousands of lives annually.

Huge strides have been made in combating diseases such as polio, tuberculosis, measles, diphtheria, pertussis and tetanus using vaccination. Many of these diseases are now uncommon, and mothers today may have never even heard of friends who have lost children due to illnesses like these.

The success of vaccines may therefore lead to complacency and a false sense of comfort, unless we remember the devastation these diseases caused in years gone by. In some areas of Africa, it was customary for mothers not to name their babies until the measles season had passed, for fear they would not live through the season. Such fear of measles is no longer with us, and yet it is only by a continued sense of urgency that we can ensure that vaccine-preventable diseases do not return.

In South Africa, newer vaccines have been introduced as they have been developed, allowing protection against Haemophilus influenza type b (Hib), Streptococcus pneumoniae, hepatitis B, human papillomavirus and rotavirus. These vaccines are making a large impact on the health of South African children. We hope to see even more vaccines developed and implemented.

You may be a parent and have some concerns with regards to vaccinating your child, here are a few frequently asked questions about vaccines:

Common vaccine questions:

◆ Are vaccines safe? Yes, they are safe. Vaccines are more studied for safety than any other medication.

◆ What are the possible side effects? Like all medication, it is possible for a vaccine to cause sideeffects. Mostly these are minor (a sore arm or low-grade fever) and go within a few days. Remember, vaccines are continually monitored for safety and are used to immunise millions of children in every country in the world each year. Not immunising a child also involves risk and could put the child and others who come into contact with him or her at risk of contracting a potentially deadly disease.

◆ How do vaccines work? They involve giving a person small, harmless amounts of an infectious agent (for example a virus) for the immune system to see it and prepare itself for the next time it meets the same infectious agent. Some vaccines are weakened forms of live infectious agents (called live attenuated vaccines) and some are inactivated parts of the infectious agent.

◆ What are the risks of not vaccinating? The diseases vaccines prevent can be dangerous, even deadly. Statistically, the chances of your child getting diseases such as measles, pertussis or another vaccine-preventable disease might be low, and your child might never need the protection vaccines offer. However, you don’t want them to be lacking the protection vaccines provide if they ever do need it. Vaccination is the best way to protect your child from unpredictable side effects of serious infectious diseases. Vaccination protects your child and community.

◆ Can I wait and vaccinate my child when they are older? Children under 5 are especially susceptible to disease because their immune systems have not built up the necessary defences to fight infection. By immunising on time (by age 2), you can protect your child from disease and also protect others at school or daycare.

◆ My child has a weakened immune system (immunecompromised) – can he be vaccinated? The principle is that for people with weak immune systems such as those born with immune deficiencies, or those recovering from cancer or taking medication which dampens their immune system, live vaccines should be avoided, but non-live (inactivated) vaccines can be given. In fact, the non-live vaccines become even more important to protect the person from possible future infections. It is possible the immune response to vaccines may not be as strong as in a healthy person and the child may need re-vaccination once recovered.

Health

en-za

2023-03-29T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-03-29T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://thepostza.pressreader.com/article/282162180471689

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