Around the time my firstborn was two years old, I started researching vaccinations. Up until his second birthday, we had been vaccinating on schedule. Once I started delving into the heaps of information and controversy, however, we began vaccinating on a delayed schedule, and have done so with our other two children, as well.
Through the research that I've done, I've found some pretty incredible information criticizing vaccinations, tempered by plenty of unreliable and sensationalistic "literature," mostly on rogue websites filled with fear mongering and very little fact (unfortunately, it's usually on the side opposing vaccinations, which makes the anti-vaccination camp look uneducated indeed). It's important to remember that just because something is written on a website doesn't mean it's true, credible, or factual (including this one. I urge you to look up any and all information I provide here for yourself, and please come back and let me know if you find facts to the contrary of what I've posted).
I don't claim to be any type of expert, but I'm sharing the information I've found in the hopes that someone may find it useful. I respect and understand both sides of the issue, and have no doubt that parents on either end of the spectrum are doing what they believe to be best.
So what are the issues with vaccines? Certainly the loudest and most well known controversy is that of MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) and autism. There is a barrage of constant misinformation being pumped out regarding this particular vaccine. When Andrew Wakefield was disgraced and his study discounted, the headlines screamed about "no links between vaccines and autism," and "no harm from mercury in vaccinated children."
In fact, there
is no mercury in any current vaccine in the US other than the flu shot. Additionally, there has never been mercury
in the MMR vaccine--the issue was that of the measles illness itself
being found in the guts of children studied, some of whom showed signs of autism, some of whom went on to develop
autism later in their young lives, and some who didn't. The evidence was inconclusive, but
definitely warranted further investigation, which never happened. The controversy surrounding Wakefield is huge, but I invite you to read Callous Disregard, written by the man himself, which is eye opening.
The mercury in vaccines is a completely separate subject from Andrew Wakefield and his study, and I find it frustrating when they are clumped together. There was mercury (or thimerosal) in multiple vaccines in the 90s, and children were harmed by it, and there are mounds of proof--it's just not easy to find, and it's not found through Google. Did you know that the safety of thimerosal on humans was tested on 15 meningitis patients, all of whom died from their disease a few weeks after they received the chemical? "No adverse effects were reported" because there wasn't enough time to make a conclusion.
Autism
is not the only issue--or even the most important one, in my opinion. There are
hosts of autoimmune illnesses that are on the rise in young children, such as diabetes, asthma, and juvenile arthritis, and there is a school of
thought that suggests the practice of giving so many vaccinations all at
once is the culprit. The introduction of so many different viruses, toxins, allergens, and other agents at such a young age confuses the body, and it begins to attack itself. Something that should be investigated, but once
again, has not been adequately addressed to date.
What toxins, you ask? Toxins like formaldehyde, phenol and aluminum (found in flu, Hib, Pneumococcal, and DTaP vaccines). Gelatin, a common allergen, is a flu vaccine
ingredient, and the vaccine is cultured in chicken embryo (egg), useful to know for those with egg allergies. Hepatitis B is cultured in yeast or yeast extract. As for foreign agents, most MMR vaccines are produced in fetal bovine (cow)
serum, and the rubella vaccine has been produced using cells from an aborted fetus infected with the disease. The Rotavirus vaccine is produced in vero (monkey kidney) cell culture. It's naive to assume that none of these foreign agents don't have some effect on our bodies. An early polio vaccine (1950s) was contaminated with a monkey virus named SV40 that causes cancer in laboratory animals. It's been suggested that this virus was the cause for thousands of cases of cancers like mesothelioma, brain, and bone cancers. Is it true? We may never know, but it's certainly alarming.
Additionally,
though most doctors will tell you that adverse vaccine reactions are rare,
they are under reported to VAERS (Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System) by as much as 85%, which makes them far more
frequent than the average person realizes.
Part of the problem as I see it is that our medical care is very "one size fits all." Through my research I came to learn that when making the vaccine schedule, the lowest common denominator is taken, that being families with less access to good health care or families who are unable to afford frequent co-pays, and the CDC (Center for Disease Control) and AAP (American Academy of Pediatrics) work up from there. One of the reasons babies and small children are given so many shots in one
visit is because that takes away the need for the parents to return the
children for another doctor visit--statistically, many don't go back.
The Hepatitis B vaccine became routine at birth due
to the fact that so many mothers who were infected with Hepatitis B were
passing it on to their babies. Over time, it went from being
administered to only infected babies to everyone, regardless of the
mother's medical history. You can refuse the shot for your
newborn at birth. Hepatitis B is only transmitted through sexual contact or intravenous drug use, and so our family doesn't administer hepatitis B to our kids until they are 4, and then it's
really just because it's the law in NY for public school attendance.
It
trickles into prenatal care, too. Each time I became pregnant I had to
have an HIV test despite testing negative with my prior pregnancy (NY
law). Each of my children had to have erythromycin put on their eyes at
birth despite my testing negative for gonorrhea and chlamydia (which can
cause serious complications for the baby as it passes through the birth
canal). In fact, even babies born by C-section are given erythromycin,
which makes little sense since they are not passing through the birth
canal and so have little chance, if any, of coming into contact with the
mother's infection (especially if she's tested negative during
pregnancy!). Meanwhile, we take just one Strep B test, and if it's
negative, we do not get antibiotics during labor--never mind the fact
that Strep B comes and goes and can be negative at 35 weeks and positive
at birth.
Doesn't make much sense, does it?
Neither extreme is good, in my opinion--unless there is
some medical or religious reason for children to remain unvaccinated.
Personally, I'm not anti-vaccine; I'm anti-toxin and anti-schedule. We do vaccinate, but do so on a delayed schedule (and skip a couple altogether). I
believe that certain vaccines given at certain times, and too many
vaccines given at one time, can be harmful, but I won't skip
vaccinations all together. I also don't believe that vaccine
manufacturers and those making the vaccine schedule, like the CDC and
the AAP, have our best interests at heart. I've come to believe that much of it has to do with corporations,
stakeholders, government, liability, and money. Lots and lots of money.
I
don't trust anyone as much as I trust myself and my instincts when it comes to what's best for my children. It doesn't matter how many experts tell me that the current vaccine
schedule is safe, that the toxins in vaccines are given in such
minuscule amounts it doesn't matter, etc., etc. At this point I'm confident enough to base my decisions on
what I've learned as a layperson and my instincts as a mother, as well
as my own common sense. I don't like when people cite studies because I've learned that unless the studies are conducted completely independently, they can be skewed to say pretty much anything (did you hear that cloth diapers are as bad for the environment as disposables are? Do you know who conducted that study? Procter & Gamble. As in, the Pampers and Luvs manufacturer).
Most doctors I speak to on this subject give me the standard answers, or offer statistics which
really mean nothing--because my children are not numbers on a
page. But have these doctors actually done any research themselves?
Doubtful. They are repeating what they have been told, which is
insufficient at best.
There
are those "experts" that will tell you that as an average parent, you
know nothing and should trust scientists and those who have gone to
medical school (as if that makes anyone smarter in and of itself). But did
you know that parents, just regular old laypeople with no medical or scientific
background, are responsible for ensuring that future generations are not
harmed by vaccines as their children were? It was one such group of determined parents in the 90s that finally got the US to stop using mercury
in new vaccines and phase it out of current ones.
What
we know as DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus, and a-cellular pertussis, known
as whooping cough) used to be DTP (which was the full pertussis virus as
opposed to it being split), and children became ill and died as a
result. It was the great and exhausting efforts put forth by parents decades ago
that forced the hand of those in charge and made them look at the
vaccine and realize it was harmful.
Not related to vaccines, the plight of Augusto and Michaela Odone, as portrayed in the film Lorenzo's Oil, again highlights what can happen when parents take advocating for their children to another level. These two
parents took matters into their own hands and made medical advancements
that were extraordinary, to say the least. Neither of them was a doctor
or scientist.
Lastly, I avoid mainstream parenting sources for advice on vaccinating.
Dr. Paul Offit and the AAP are quoted in publications like Parents
Magazine, promoting the safety of vaccines. And then, a little digging
finds the following:
"The vaccine industry gives millions to the Academy of Pediatrics for
conferences, grants, medical education classes and even helped build
their headquarters. The totals are kept secret, but public documents
reveal bits and pieces.
A $342,000 payment from Wyeth, maker of the pneumococcal vaccine - which makes $2 billion a year in sales.
A $433,000 contribution from Merck, the same year the academy
endorsed Merck's HPV vaccine - which made $1.5 billion a year in sales.
Another top donor: Sanofi Aventis, maker of 17 vaccines and a new
five-in-one combo shot just added to the childhood vaccine schedule last
month. Every Child By Two, a group that promotes early immunization for
all children, admits the group takes money from the vaccine industry,
too - but wouldn't tell us how much. A spokesman told CBS News:
"There are simply no conflicts to be unearthed." But guess who's listed
as the group's treasurers: Officials from Wyeth and a paid advisor to
big pharmaceutical clients.
Then there's Paul Offit, perhaps the most widely-quoted defender of
vaccine safety. He's gone so far as to say babies can tolerate "10,000
vaccines at once." This is how Offit described himself in a previous
interview: "I'm the chief of infectious disease at Children's Hospital
of Philadelphia and a professor of pediatrics at Penn's medical school,"
he said. Offit was not willing to be interviewed on this subject but
like others in this CBS News investigation, he has strong industry ties.
In fact, he's a vaccine industry insider. Offit holds in a $1.5 million
dollar research chair at Children's Hospital, funded by Merck. He holds
the patent on an anti-diarrhea vaccine he developed with Merck,
Rotateq, which has prevented thousands of hospitalizations. And future
royalties for the vaccine were just sold for $182 million cash. Dr.
Offit's share of vaccine profits? Unknown.
There's nothing illegal about the financial relationships, but to
critics, they pose a serious risk for conflicts of interest. As one
member of Congress put it, money from the pharmaceutical industry can
shape the practices of those who hold themselves out to be
"independent." The American Academy of Pediatrics, Every Child By Two
and Dr. Offit would not agree to interviews, but all told us they're up
front about the money they receive, and it doesn't sway their opinions.
Today's immunization schedule now calls for kids to get 55 doses of
vaccines by age 6. Ideally, it makes for a healthier society. But
critics worry that industry ties could impact the advice given to the
public about all those vaccines."
Below are some of my sources.
Dr. Sears' Vaccine Book has got useful, factual information, is constantly updated with the latest things you need to know, and
has some alternate vaccine schedules for those who don't want to follow the
AAP schedule.
Evidence of Harm is an excellent book to read. It goes into the fight parents led
against mercury in vaccines in the 90s. Eye opening regarding our
government and its agencies, and where their priorities lie.
This is a great site, established in part by the parents highlighted in the book above.
Another
good book is What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About Children's Vaccinations. It's been fairly recently (2010) updated and its got
information on vaccine ingredients, etc., that I did not
find anywhere else.
You
can also pick up two books by Jenny McCarthy--Louder Than Words, and Mother Warriors. I know she seems like an
unlikely author on the subject, and she's been made fun of quite a bit. She's not unintelligent, however, and I found her books extremely helpful
and riveting.
The most important thing to remember is that the choice is, and should be, yours. Make your own decision, but make it an informed one, no matter which side of the coin you fall on.
Showing posts with label food allergies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food allergies. Show all posts
Thursday, July 18, 2013
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Potential Poison: The Life of a Food Allergy Mom
Imagine walking into a grocery store and nearly every box, every drink, and every bag (even the organic, all natural ones) have the potential to poison your child within two hours (or less) of ingesting it. The poison may just make your child sick to his or her stomach, or it might cause hives, or even catastrophic breathing failure. This poison is so strong that it may make your child sick if he or she eats foods that are even on the same equipment as that poison. The problem is that this poison is often odorless, invisible, and tasteless. You are your child's only defense. You must read every label of every food you give your child multiple times to ensure that you do not feed him or her something that will poison them. You also wash your hands constantly when you are in the kitchen and practically panic any time a well-meaning relative tries to make safe food for your child just because you know how much your child trusts you. He or she will eat whatever you give because they have ultimate faith that you could never hurt him or her. (Faith that, despite your best efforts, proves to be occasionally misplaced.) That is the pressure that is on a food allergy mom every minute of every day.
In my case, my son currently has dairy, nut, and egg sensitivities. Additionally, pork is the only meat we've found so far that he can eat without throwing up. (Sensitivities in small children are basically identical to official allergies with the same symptoms and life threatening potential. The only difference is that "sensitivities" are not officially diagnosed and (often) the child grows out of them by the time they hit puberty . .. or at least that is every mom's dream. For official diagnosis, it is also recommended that one has the blood test, the skin test, and a challenge done. I'm hoping that he will outgrow them before all that is necessary.) Meanwhile, because of the pervasiveness of dairy and his extreme sensitivity to it, I do not trust any restaurant's food enough to let him have it. (It's really hard to pin down accidental contamination). So, every time we go out to eat, I have to prepare and bring food for him to eat on his own plate from home to decrease the potential for accidental contamination. Every visit to a friend's house, I have to be painfully aware of what my child is putting near his mouth at all times. If their child is having a snack of peanut butter and milk, I have to make sure that my son does not touch the table, the cup, or the wash cloth that touched any of the food. Every time we are invited to a birthday party, we have to make our own birthday cake and/or ice cream and (often) a meal to bring with us and I spend most of the "eating" portion of the party on pins and needles afraid that he will start crying because he cannot have what the others have or (worse yet!) will get hold of the other children's food, have a reaction, and we will end up in the emergency room.
Don't get me wrong. I know that I am ultimately lucky. I have a child who is very healthy and will likely remain healthy and I also know that it is very, very probable that he will grow out of some, if not all, of his sensitivities. I have also never had to witness my child gasping for air because of any reaction, yet. We have had some facial swelling, nasty rashes, hives, blood in the stool and heart racing episodes, but those have, thankfully, been few and far between. Mostly, we have a lot of diarrhea, stomach aches, light rashes, and sleepless nights when he comes in contact with his problem foods (signs of intolerances rather than full allergies, thank God!).
My son's food sensitivities have also forced me into a new relationship with food that has led to many new, positive choices that I may have been too lazy to make before. (Spending increased time in the health food store will do that to a person!) I also am extremely fortunate that I am a stay at home mom who really can buy, prepare, and watch every morsel of food my son eats. We can also afford a lot of alternative foods that are pricey, but that give my son a sense of "normalcy" (soy puddings, "safe" cake mixes, a sometimes necessity since I'm only slowly learning how to become a better baker, safe gummy treats, etc.).
Are his food issues caused by all the chemicals I exposed him to when I was pregnant? Perhaps. I probably wasn't as careful as I am now about what foods I bought. Are they the result of a bad genetic lottery? Perhaps. His father certainly had many food issues at his age and I have several seasonal allergies. Over all, I've found the search for the "whys" are pretty useless at this stage in the game. For now, we just hope that it won't last forever and I'm just grateful that our diligence has paid off in that, most of the time, our son is happy, healthy, and eats very well. I offer this testimony, not to complain about my life, but to explain a little of how a food allergy affects everyone in a family. For better or worse, this is our life and this is who our son is. We are doing everything we can to make the world a safer place for him and to be the best parents we can be. Just remember when you hear about a child with a food sensitivity or allergy how important it is to help his or her parent out a little if you can. Pay attention to the ingredients if you want to make something for the family to eat, try to avoid snacks that contain the allergens if the child is coming over, let the parent know what you are serving at birthday parties so that she can try to approximate it as best she can for her child, and remember that this is about safety, not special treatment. It takes a community to keep some of our most precious, fragile children safe.
Thanks for reading,
Shawna,
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Shawna
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