SHOULD parents have their children vaccinated? Decades of research show that vaccines are extremely safe and an invaluable means of fighting disease, so the answer is a clear yes. But some parents remain confused. In the UK, much of the blame lies with poor government information and sensationalist media reports about the safety of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine. In the US, a small, noisy group of families has prolonged uncertainty by continuing to insist that vaccines have caused their children鈥檚 autism.
Unfortunately, this group is particularly vociferous at the moment. For reasons that have not been fully explained, the US government has compensated a mother and father who claim that their daughter developed autism as a result of childhood vaccinations. The anti-vaccination campaigners are triumphant, issuing blogs and press releases proclaiming that the government has finally admitted that vaccines cause autism. In reality, nothing has changed, and parents have nothing new to fear.
At the centre of the furore is the sad case of a 9-year-old girl who developed communication problems similar to those seen in autism after being vaccinated. Yet the link between these two events is unclear. In very rare cases, vaccines can cause brain damage. This may be one of those instances, with the damage producing autism-like symptoms. The girl also has a genetic disorder in her mitochondria, which provide her cells with energy. Such disorders are associated with autism, so perhaps she was always destined to develop the condition. Or perhaps vaccination aggravated the genetic disorder to produce features seen in autism.
Advertisement
This latter explanation is favoured by the government but the truth is that each explanation fits the facts (see 鈥淰accines may have triggered autism-like symptoms, US court rules鈥). As with almost all cases of autism, the cause remains elusive. Yet such subtleties tend to get lost once a story hits the headlines. Then the consequences can be serious. Measles rates in the UK are still unusually high because parents are turning down MMR. Some US states are also seeing increasing numbers of parents opting out of vaccination programmes.
To avoid another vaccine scare it is imperative that the US government explains its decision. Right now, that鈥檚 not possible because the official report has been sealed. A copy was leaked to a website last week, but it does little to clarify matters. Unless the government explains how it reached its decision, what it means 鈥 and what it does not mean 鈥 the anti-vaccination campaigners will control the story. The implications of that for personal and public health are grim.
Focus on America 鈥 Delve into the science and technology questions facing the USA in our special report.
Mental Health 鈥 Discover the latest research in our continuously updated special report.