Immunizations have been a hot topic in Colorado lately due to pending state legislation (Colorado House Bill 1288) that would tighten the rules for how parents exercise the "personal belief" exemption from immunizing their children.
When it comes to vaccinations, our family is all in. We fully immunized our oldest son according to the standard schedule from the American Academy of Pediatrics and he has never had so much as a fever from a vaccine. He has also been a really healthy kid, in general and does not have MCADD. We felt that immunizations for our MCADD kid were even more important and he has also been fully immunized according to schedule. Since entering our parenting years, my husband and I have been regular recipients of annual flu shots and also have gone in for the whooping cough booster shots (tdap).
I was curious whether there was any specific guidance on immunizations for children with fatty acid oxidation disorders and was pleased to find a study in the Journal Pediatrics from 2006. The basic outcome of the study for MCADD patients was that "because patients with these disorders can become extremely ill with
infections in general, but particularly with those
that are associated with nausea and vomiting, it is obvious that these
children
should not be permitted to confront wild-type
infections. Immunizations are an essential part of the health care
maintenance
of this patient population."
In addition, the study asserted that "contraindications against immunizations were not found
in the available infectious disease and metabolic
disease databases for inborn errors of metabolism. However, there are
some
inborn errors with associated impaired immune
functions or tendency for rapid decompensation that may require caution
and
close follow-up after administration of
immunizations. The purpose of these follow-up evaluations is to not only
monitor for
metabolic decompensation but also assess for
suboptimal immune responses to the vaccinations that could potentially
leave
these patients susceptible to major
vaccine-preventable diseases." In other words, definitely immunize, but always observe your child closely after immunizations.
Although there
definitely needs to be more research to ensure that our kids are actually getting appropriate immunity from vaccinations, I take comfort in the meantime knowing that
my kiddo has some degree of immunity from a vaccine. That comfort definitely outweighs the
unknown of what he might encounter from the actual virus he could
contract without that immunity. I know when
a vaccine is administered and what side effects to watch for. We carefully monitor him after immunizations to make sure that he is eating and drinking well and that his system isn't stressed by fever or illness, so it is definitely a far more
controlled situation than him catching a random infectious disease, which I think we
can all agree that we dread!!
No comments:
Post a Comment