By Dr. Bill Miller
It
is natural to dismiss dangers that are rarely seen. That has become our
present circumstance with respect to many devastating infectious
diseases. Since medicine has made significant progress against its
former greatest adversaries, complacent beliefs have flourished.
Surprisingly, a new malady has arisen and we are now suffering from a
growing amnesia regarding the calamitous effects of infectious disease
throughout human history.
For
example, smallpox has had a vast impact on human history. Horrific
mortality was experienced in the New World in the 1500's. Prior to the
Spanish conquistadors, it was unknown. After its introduction, the
majority of the indigenous populations were wiped out leading to the
collapse of the Aztec and Incan empires.
Naturally,
then, the fight against smallpox is not new. Smallpox inoculation is an
ancient technique. It was practiced centuries ago in Africa, India, and
China, and in the Ottoman Empire. The ultimate success of smallpox
vaccination is credited to Sir Edward Jenner in England. In 1796, he
successfully introduced the technique of cowpox vaccination
demonstrating its subsequent protective effect against smallpox. Today,
due to the effectiveness of world-wide smallpox vaccination programs,
that disease has been effectively eradicated from the planet.
However,
this is not the case for other consequential infectious diseases.
Recently, a whooping-cough epidemic swept through California where
vaccination rates are steadily lagging. Contrary to any ordinary
expectation, it is the most affluent and educated parents who are
shunning immunization. The highest concentration is the home ground of
the entertainment industry across the wealthy Malibu, Brentwood, and
West Hollywood corridor. In these districts, there has been 26 percent
increase in the number of parents claiming a Personal Belief Exemption
to exclude their children from the vaccination requirements for school
age children. A recently released study in the American Academy of
Pediatrics noted that between 2006 and 2013, the number of pediatricians
encountering parents who refuse vaccines had substantially increased,
from 75 percent to 87 percent. Others are delaying the shots that are
supposed to be given on a strict schedule to maximize their
effectiveness.
Although
many regard vaccination as merely an individual decision, it is
decidedly not. It is part of a social contract through which we take
into account the needs of others. Whether you or your neighbor are
immunized matters to the community. Herd immunity – a means of
protecting a whole community from disease by immunizing a critical mass
of its populace – for the few individuals in any population that cannot
be vaccinated, is crucial protection. When general vaccination rates
decline, there is a consequential loss of this necessary collective
immunity. For example, Arizona had two measles outbreaks in the past two
years. Dozens were infected and thousands exposed. The culprit in each
instance was an under-vaccinated general population.
This
new disdain for vaccination is a singular historical aberration. Highly
educated people who pride themselves on being informed are instead
being misled by social media, which now has subsumed the archaic role of
ill-informed 'village gossip'. The target is a demographic that might
pride themselves on being ahead of the curve and otherwise champion
social action for issues such as climate change. However, some in this
otherwise concerned demographic that feels that they are just too smart
to have their own children vaccinated and are complacently ignorant of
the health consequences for their larger community. The trend appears to
have originated with a fraudulent report in a British medical journal
linking vaccination with autism. This report was subsequently revealed
to have been based on fraudulent research and was retracted by the
scientific journal. Nonetheless, the damage was done and it has gained
currency by ill-informed repetition.
The
contemporary decline in vaccination rates is an example of hard-won
knowledge cast aside. It has become a modern amnesia that will surely be
short-lived. The next outbreak of a preventable infectious disease with
its incumbent tragedies is always lurking. Fortunately, there is a
solution. There needs to be a concerted program to recover our eroded
memories by familiarizing those who mistake our present moment for a
permanent condition with the bitter lessons of history.
Dr.
Bill Miller has been a physician in academic and private practice for
over 30 years. He is the author of The Microcosm Within: Evolution and
Extinction in the Hologenome. He currently serves as a scientific
advisor to OmniBiome Therapeutics, a pioneering company in discovering
and developing solutions to problems in human fertility and health
through management of the human microbiome. For more information, www.themicrocosmwithin.com.
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