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MASSACHUSETTS NURSE NEWSLETTER :: January/February
2003
Facts About the Small Pox Vaccine
Smallpox
vaccine, which is made from a live virus related to the one that
causes smallpox, is considered the most dangerous immunization for
humans. Before the
United States
stopped routine smallpox vaccinations in 1972, life-threatening
complications occurred at a rate of 15 per million among those who
received their first smallpox vaccination, and the number included
about one to two deaths.
Vulnerable
people include pregnant women, babies younger than a year old and
people with HIV or other immune disorders, some types of cancer,
organ transplants or histories of skin problems like eczema. No
one who lives with a person at high risk should be vaccinated, said
Dr. Lisa Rotz, an epidemiologist with the bioterror program at the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Vaccination
can also cause problems like soreness and swelling at the inoculation
site. In recent trials of the vaccine on healthy young volunteers,
about 40 percent to 50 percent had substantial local reactions,
30 percent felt impaired in their daily activities, and about
5 percent
took time off from work or studies.
Dr.
William Schaffner, the chairman of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt
University, said experts expect that health workers would take more
sick time than the research volunteers.
To
reduce the chance of transmission, the CDC guidelines call for
the vaccination site be covered with a gauze bandage and tape for
two to three weeks, until the scab falls off. Vaccinated health
care workers will wear special semipermeable bandages at work, because
they are better than gauze at preventing transmission.
Researchers
say very close contact is required to spread vaccinia, like touching
the vaccination site or an article that has been in contact with
it like clothing or a bandage. Infection occurs when the virus enters
a break in the skin caused by a cut or a rash.
The
Israeli Experience
Israel
has successfully vaccinated more than 15,000 soldiers and public
health workers against smallpox on a voluntary basis since July
with virtually no severe side effects, senior Israeli officials
say.
"The
United States has much to learn from Israel's experience,"
Leonard J. Marcus, the director of the health care negotiation and
conflict resolution program at the Harvard School of Public Health,
concluded in a recent report on Israel's medical response to bioterrorist
threats.
Though
as many as 30 to 50 percent of potential volunteers initially resisted
being vaccinated, experts said, volunteer rates rose sharply after
public health officials began discussing the program's risks and
benefits, and after medical professionals began being vaccinated.
Dr.
Marcus concluded in an October report that after being inoculated,
5 percent of those vaccinated reported side effects like fevers,
headaches, muscle pain, fatigue and weakness. Medical literature
suggests that one in a million people is likely to die from the
smallpox vaccine, and one in roughly 250,000 is likely to suffer
serious side effects.
However,
Israel
uses the Lister
vaccine strain, different from the strain used by the
United
States
. Dr. Lev said that Lister was less virulent
than the American strain and has fewer side effects. He said Israeli
doctors and health professionals had screened out those with health
conditions that precluded safe inoculation, like pregnant women
and people with ailments that suppress the immune system.
There
were only two problematic cases in
Israel
so far - one a woman with an immune disorder. She was not vaccinated
but was infected by her husband, who was. She responded quickly
to treatment and recovered fully, Dr. Lev said.
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