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Vaccine timetable for children is safe, experts say

Three-year-old Charles Clarke Jr. gets an H1N1 swine flu vaccine injection in his leg at an Asthma fair at Children's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts November 14, 2009. REUTERS/Brian Snyder

(Reuters) – The current guideline for immunizing children against polio, whooping cough, measles and other infectious diseases is safe, but should still be monitored, federal health advisers said on Wednesday.

Three-year-old Charles Clarke Jr. gets an H1N1 swine flu vaccine injection in his leg at an Asthma fair at Children’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts November 14, 2009. REUTERS/Brian Snyder

In what they called the most comprehensive review to date, scientists at the Institute of Medicine (IOM) said there is no evidence that giving children vaccines according to the recommended timetable causes other problems such as autism or asthma.

IOM, part of the National Academies, a federally-charted group of scientific advisers to the government, said it hopes the findings would reassure parents, doctors and others even as it recommends that the research continue.

“The message is that the schedule is safe by all existing data,” said Dr. Pauline Thomas, an IOM adviser and a professor at New Jersey Medical School in Newark.

Requested by U.S. health officials, the year-long review of existing studies underscores the lingering concerns some people have about the vaccines, especially the many shots babies and toddlers receive.

The findings come as the nation wrestles with various outbreaks, including an influenza epidemic. Several U.S. states are also grappling with record spikes of whooping cough.

Federal vaccine guidelines recommend 24 immunizations by age 2, and sometimes children can get up to five shots in one doctor’s visit.

While most people follow the recommended timetable, IOM said about 1 percent of Americans refuse all vaccines.

The reasons vary. Some object for religious reasons but others are concerned that underlying medical conditions could raise the risk of possible complications from the injections. Others worry potential harms outweigh the benefits or simply mistrust the government, which reviews and approves vaccines before they can be marketed.

Still, most parents comply.

Pamela Maslen, a registered nurse and lactation consultant in Silver Spring, Maryland, said her work overseas influenced her decision to follow the recommendations when her first daughter was born nearly five years ago.

“I pretty much decided I wanted to keep on the schedule because I knew we would be moving, and I didn’t want her to be susceptible to anything,” said Maslen, 35, who has two daughters and is expecting her third child soon.

SOME PARENTS STILL WORRY

IOM’s panel of independent scientists looked at the schedule of immunizations and all available scientific literature to determine safety. They also reviewed CDC and the Food and Drug Administration databases that track side effects.

Yet suspicions over vaccines have continued for years. Nearly 40 percent of U.S. parents have some mistrust of childhood vaccines, the CDC has said.

Some suspicions arose over autism and thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative once used in many U.S. vaccines but no longer. No studies have shown a clear link, and IOM said in 2004 that researchers should look elsewhere for the disorder’s cause.

“The concerns are certainly still out there,” said Cassandra Jessee, 39, who opted to “delay” the vaccines for her 16-month-old son by spreading them over several months rather than one doctor’s visit.

“It means more co-pays and doctors appointments, but to me it is worth it,” she said.

While some pediatricians allow their patients to stretch the timetable, others refuse to do so saying it poses risks.

The IOM panel said there is no evidence that an alternative schedule that would be safer or less safe.

But studying the health impact of children who get vaccines on time versus those who do not would be too risky and expensive, it said. Instead, while current databases could be enhanced, they are still the best way to monitor safety, it added.

Panelists also said doctors need to find better ways to communicate with the public about vaccine safety and concerns.

(Additional reporting by Elvina Nawaguna; Editing by Jilian Mincer and Tim Dobbyn)

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