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Mmr Case

Autor:   •  October 29, 2013  •  Case Study  •  860 Words (4 Pages)  •  974 Views

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At the age of 14 months old, most children in North America and Europe receive a triple vaccination against three diseases: measles, mumps, and rubella (also known as German measles). Abbreviated as MMR, the vaccination has come under increased scrutiny over the last decade foar concerns over potential link between MMR and autism (a neural disorder affecting behavioral and cognitive skills). Concerned parents have become vocal advocates on both sides of the argument. On one side, parents of autistic children believe that MMR, or specifically the preservative agent thimerosal (a mercury-containing chemical compound), causes significant intestinal problem and behavioral changes shortly after administration of the vaccination. On the other side of the debate, parents are concerned that a choice not to vaccinate exposes children to disease that have long been controlled in our population.

This debate over a connection between MMR and autism began in earnest in 1998 after the publication in the British medical journal Lancet of a research paper by Dr. Andrew Wakefield of the Royal Free Hospital in London. The paper proposed a new syndrome with two conditions: chronic intestinal disease and the loss of behavioral skills that had already been acquired as part of normal child development. Out of 12 cases in the paper, parents of 8 of the children associated the behavioral problems with the administration of the MMR vaccine. While the paper clearly stated that no association between the MMR and the condition had been proved, the implication was there, and that was apparently enough to set off a media storm.

Parents began to question the composition of the vaccination itself (specifically the thimerosal compound), and the justification for administration of all three vaccines in one dose at such a young age. Inevitably, many parents started to choose not to vaccinate their children. In Britain, 91 percent of age-eligible children were vaccinated in 1998. By 2004 that number had fallen to 80 percent which, doctors warned, was far below the 90 percent rate needed to keep the diseases under control.

Despite reassurances from the Medical Research Council in Britain and the U.S. institute of medicine that there was no evidence of a link between MMR and autism, emotions continued to escalate. Even study data from Finland (1.8 million children over a 14-year period) and Denmark (537,303 children) showing no evidence of a connection failed to have a calming effect and Wakefield's reputation as a parent advocate continued to grow, even though his study had included only 12 cases.

However, in 2004, a four month investigation by a journalist at England’s sunday times newspaper revealed information that

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