Childhood
immunization has been described as the most effectivepreventive
intervention of the twentieth century. When pediatricians
recount the defining experiences of their careers, they
often refer to the infectious diseases that afflicted past
generations of children and parents. Every generation of
physicians can recollect such fearsome illnesses -
"I remember the polio cases that
occurred every summer, the 'iron lung,' the wheelchairs."
"I recall the measles outbreaks,
the infants born blind and deaf from rubella, the epidemics
of whooping cough."
"As residents, we spent much of our
time treating airway infections and meningitis due to HiB
bacteria.Now young pediatricians hardly see these diseases."
Unfortunately, out of sight is too often
out of mind. Each of these diseases poses a current danger
to our children. Some infections – like whooping
cough - continue to circulate at low levels, especially
in older individuals, only to re-emerge in children as
threats to life and health whenever vaccination rates fall.
Others have become uncommon in the US but remain just an
airline flight from our borders and our children.
The pediatric community at Huntington
Hospital strongly supports the efforts of experts and child
advocates at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) and the American Academy of Pediatrics to educate
parents about the real risks of childhood infections and
the protective role of immunizations.
For more information visit American
Academy of Pediatrics |