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From:                   "Michael Albert" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:                     <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                ZNet Commentary June 25 Cynthia Peters
Date sent:              Fri, 25 Jun 1999 08:55:16 +0100

Here is today's ZNet Commentary Delivery from Cynthia Peters. The
attached
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Here then is today's ZNet Commentary...

------------------------------------------


ZNet Commentary
June 25, 1999

Chicken Pox?!
By Cynthia Peters

Many times during the past week, I wished my kids had been vaccinated
against chickenpox. It's a miserable disease, and I hated to see them
suffer through it.But overall, it's a fairly mild disease when left to run
its course among children. Children with chickenpox rarely experience
complications. Adults, pregnant women, and immuno-suppressed people
experience much more severe cases and sometimes death. The chickenpox
vaccine - Varivax - is not currently "required." However, the American
Academy of Pediatrics recommends it, and it seems likely to follow in the
wake of the other standard (and currently required) vaccines against
childhood illnesses - measles, mumps and rubella. So is there a problem?
Should we not be grateful to Merck - the maker of the vaccine - for saving
us from this significant annoyance? Bringing a layperson's curiosity,
parental concern for my own little ones soaking in their oatmeal baths,
and an inbred distrust of large pharmaceutical companies and the FDA, I
dipped into the available literature on the chickenpox vaccine - a book
from my library, numerous newspaper articles, medical journals, and
various web sites. Following are some of my concerns:

The vaccine is known to provide only temporary immunity, whereas actually
contracting the disease is known to provide life-long immunity. Providing
temporary immunity to children could drive chicken pox disease into the
older adult population where it can cause many more deaths and
complications.

Merck - the pharmaceutical company that makes the chickenpox vaccine - has
been ordered by the FDA to follow vaccinated children for 15 years to
better understand how long they can expect to enjoy immunity. Clearly,
individuals need to be studied much longer - 80 years and more - to know
whether the vaccine's immunity follows them into old age. On the topic of
longitudinal studies, how do we address the fact that varicella and its
human hosts have been evolving together for thousands of years? Varicella
developed the important knack of not killing off its host. Instead, it
just causes minor illness, spreads easily through groups of children, and
then lays dormant in the nerve cells until it (occasionally) emerges
decades later as shingles. This painful re-emergence of the varicella
virus makes the victim contagious for chickenpox. Anyone without immunity
who comes into contact with someone with shingles is likely to come away
with chickenpox. Thus, the ingenious varicella virus survives in its host,
reactivating itself decades later with the ability to infect a whole new
population of children.

In the process of fighting off chicken pox, children's immune systems go
through the important exercise of identifying an unfriendly viral invader
and rallying the body's resources to develop the proper antibodies in
response. Some doctors believe that childhood illnesses such as chickenpox
provide a training opportunity to the immune system, arming it with the
"knowledge" and "experience" of fighting off disease that come in handy
later on in life.

Furthermore, adult immune systems already equipped with chickenpox
antibodies, continue to get stronger and develop as they come into contact
with the varicella virus. Pediatricians who frequently see children with
chickenpox tend to have powerful antibodies to the disease, and, so,
rarely contract shingles later in life. During this last week and a half,
in the process of taking care of my virus-ridden children, my immune
system geared up against the disease, produced extra antibodies, and
perhaps further refined itself, equipping me with disease-fighting power.

Is there any value to this immune system training? I don't know for sure.
The question has not been studied. When Merck tracks the effect of the
chickenpox vaccine, they do not ask what the cost to our immune system is.
But they do look at short-term financial trade-offs. The vaccine costs
about $40 per child, the argument goes. The annual cost to "society" of
hospitalizations and lost work is estimated to be more than $400 million
by the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta. The obvious short-term
financial savings justify the vaccine.

Suddenly concerned with the practical aspects of a single mother's life,
the head of the University of Florida vaccine study says, "If you have a
single mother with five children and one child comes down with chicken
pox, the mother either has to take off work or hire a baby sitter. When
one child comes down with chicken pox, two weeks later another one comes
down with it and then other cases may follow. A mother in such a family is
literally out of work or paying for a babysitter for a month or more."

True. It is no piece of cake to nurse any number of children through the
disease. And it's even harder in this society - with so many uninsured,
rare instances of unpaid sick leave, and even rarer instances of paid time
off to care for sick family members. The vaccine could be quite practical
to a single mom of five children, but let's not accept that as a solution.
A quick-fix vaccine should not direct our attention away from larger
political goals and supports for families - such as universal health care
and adequate benefits.

Other deeper concerns could be addressed as well. While Merck lines its
pockets with profits through the sale of a vaccine that protects against
one isolated virus, who is addressing themselves to our immune system's
other needs? Such as an adequate diet, cleaner air and water, access to
such stress-reducing resources as adequate housing, decent schools,
fulfilling jobs, etc.

There are lots of ways we need to take care of ourselves, our children,
and our single mothers. Varivax might indeed be a life-saving vaccine for
some who are most vulnerable to the virus, and it should be an option for
people. However, health protections should not be based only on short-term
gains. It may be that our immune systems are somewhat inconvenient to
maintain: they need the occasional annoying battle with a virus; they need
bodies that are adequately nourished and cared for. Nor should health
protections be based on the needs of a profit-driven economy that wants to
prevent illness because illness is inconvenient.




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