Las enfermedades y muertes que previenen las vacunas que los CDC han dejado de recomendar

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The federal government has significantly reduced the number of recommended childhood vaccines, making them routine vaccines that protect millions of people with serious infections, widespread disability and death.

Only three of the six vaccines that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC, por sus siglas in English) have routinely recommended — against hepatitis A, hepatitis B and rotavirus — have already avoided 2 million hospitalizations and more than 90,000 deaths in 30 years ago, according to publications from this same entity.

Vaccines against these three infections, as well as against respiratory sinus virus (RSV), meningococcal infection, influenza and covid, are now only recommended for children with a high risk of serious infection or after “making clinical decisions in a shared way”, it is decided to consult doctors and fathers.

The CDC maintains its recommendations for 11 childhood vaccines: against sarampión, paperas and rubella; la tos ferina, el tetanus et la difteria; conocidal bacterial infection such as Hib; pneumonia; polio; chickenpox; and human papillomavirus (HPV).

Según una hoja informativa del Departamento de Salud y Servicios Humanos (HHS, por sus siglas en inglés), las medicos medicos publicos y privados seguirán los vacunas contra les enfermedades que le CDC ya no recomiendan de manera universal; Fathers who want to vaccinate their children against these enfermedades will not tend to pay for the dose in their bowl.

Experts on childhood illnesses are shown baffled ahead of the change in the guide. HHS explained that the changes were made as “a scientific review of the evidence” and were aligned with vaccination programs in other developed countries.

HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an anti-vaccine activist, sent Denmark as a model. Without an embargo, the town hall holiday calendars of European countries are more similar to the current time which must be modified.

For example, Denmark, which does not have a vaccine against rotavirus, has seen around 1,200 hospitalizations per year for this infection in babies and small children. This situation, in a country of 6 million inhabitants, is similar to that of the United States before introducing the vaccine.

“They’re okay with having 1,200 or 1,300 children hospitalized, that’s just the tip of the iceberg as far as suffocating children,” said Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and co-inventor of an approved rotavirus vaccine. “Nosotros no lo aceptamos. Deberían tratar de imitarnos a nosotros, no al revés”.

Public health officials point out that the new guide for fathers has the responsibility to investigate and includes all childhood vaccines and that this is important.

The following is a summary of diseases that precede vaccines that have already passed from there:

VRS. Respiratory sinus virus is the most common cause of hospitalization of babies in the United States.

This circular respiratory virus in otoño and winter and causing symptoms similar to refrigeration, can even be fatal for small children. Each year caused decades of miles of hospitalization and centuries of death. According to the Fundación Nacional de Enfermedades Infecciosas (National Foundation for Infectious Diseases), approximately 80% of children under 2 years of age hospitalized with RSV have no identifiable risk factors. The expected vaccines against this infection will be introduced in 2023.

Hepatitis A. Vaccination against hepatitis A, which was applied gradually at the end of the 1990s and was recommended for all young children from 2006, has caused a reduction of more than 90% of cases since 1996. This virus transmitted by food causes a very unpleasant epidemic. which affects adults, especially people who use medications or alcohol at home. In 2023, there have been a total of 1,648 cases and 85 deaths.

Hepatitis B. This disease causes alcoholic cancer, cirrhosis and other serious illnesses, and it is especially dangerous when babies or children are small. The hepatitis B virus is transmitted through blood and other body fluids, including in microscopic concentrations, and can survive on the surface for up to a week. Between 1990 and 2019, vaccination produced a 99% reduction in reported cases of hepatitis B in children and adolescents. Small-scale cold cancer has also been significantly reduced through universal childhood vaccination. Without an embargo, the virus is present, with between 2,000 and 3,000 cases reported each year between unvaccinated adults. In 2023, more than 17,000 cases of chronic hepatitis B will be diagnosed. The CDC believes that infected people do not know what they are.

Rotavirus. Before routine administration of current rotavirus vaccines began in 2006, each year 70,000 children were institutionalized, and many of them were already 50 due to the virus. “I’m familiar with winter vomit syndrome,” said University of Colorado pediatrician Sean O’Leary. “It was a terrible enfermedad, that casi ya no vemos”.

Without an embargo, the virus remains present on surfaces that touch babies, and “if you have the vaccination bags, the new hospitalized children will have,” he added.

Meningococcal vaccines. These vaccines are primarily required for adolescents and university students, who are particularly vulnerable to serious infections caused by this bacteria. In the United States, there have been between 600 and 1,000 cases per year, but more than 10% of human cases suffer, and 1 every 5 days with permanent impairments.

Flu and covid. These respiratory viruses have caused the deaths of young children in recent years, but they will be even more serious in adult adults. There is currently a response to the complaint in the country, and during the period he spent 289 minutes for this cause.

What is the Toma of Shared Clinical Decisions?

With the new changes, the decision to vaccinate children against influenza, covid, rotavirus, meningococcal infection and hepatitis A and B will now depend on what authorities call “shared clinical decision-making”, it is decided that the family must consult a health provider to determine if the vaccine is appropriate for your children.

“It’s important that the provider has to have a conversation with the patient to explain the risks and benefits and make a personalized decision,” said Lori Handy, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

Previously, the CDC used the term only in very specific circumstances, when deciding whether a person in a monogamous relationship requires the HPV vaccine, which prevents sexually transmitted infection and certain types of cancer.

According to Handy, the new CDC investigation is not in line with the scientific evidence, due to the approved protective benefit of vaccines offered to the vast majority of the population.

In their briefing justifying the changes, HHS officials Tracy Beth Høeg and Martin Kulldorff say the U.S. vaccination system requires more investigation into safety and parental election of the mayor. Dijeron that the loss of confidence in public health, caused in part by an extended vaccination schedule, has pushed most families to seek vaccines against important measures like sarampión.

Vaccines on the CDC’s modified schedule are subject to extensive safety investigation when they are evaluated and approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

“This holiday has a higher standard of safety than any other medical procedure that we have,” Handy said. “The value of the routine recommendations is that it helps the public understand that this holiday has been reviewed by everyone.”

Eric Ball, a pediatrician in Orange, Calif., pointed out that the change in guidance causes more confusion among parents, who might think it’s the safety of a vaccine rather than what’s in it.

“For public health, it is fundamental that vaccine recommendations be very clear and precise,” Ball said. “Everything that generates confusion only causes more children to be locked up.”

Ball explained that instead of addressing the child’s medical needs, limited consultation time must often be used to assure parents that vaccines are safe. The fact that an underlying vaccination is “shared clinical decision making” has nothing to do with safety concerns, but many parents may interpret it that way.

The HHS changes do not affect vaccine laws and, therefore, will allow responsible doctors to recommend vaccines as now, according to Richard Hughes IV, a lawyer and professor at George Washington University, who will ask Kennedy about vaccine changes.

“We can hope that any doctor will check the solid scientific evidence and recommend that our patients be vaccinated,” he said. The law protects providers who provide care to professionals, aggregated, and “RSV, meningococcal infection and hepatitis come with serious penalties for children’s health in this country.”

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