Students' Meningitis Shots Should Be Required Americans hate to be told what to do, but we hate losing our kids more.
by Arthur L. Caplan
Which is scarier to you — coming down with
deadly bacterial meningitis or being required to get a vaccination
against it? The disease itself should scare the living daylights out of
you, especially if you are an adolescent or the parent of one. Yet it
is the idea of mandatory vaccination that strikes fear in many.We
need to get our priorities straight when it comes to mandating or
requiring vaccines. When there is a fatal disease that is easily
prevented by a safe vaccine, the shot ought to win out every time over
our dislike of being told what to do. Bacterial meningitis, an infection of the fluid in the spinal cord or
the tissues that surround the brain, can kill within hours. One in 10
victims dies and up to 20 percent of those who survive suffer hearing
loss, deafness, brain damage, amputations or other serious
complications. Around 3,000 people a year get the disease and it can
kill within hours. Almost all of that is preventable with a vaccine. Teens and young adults ages 15 to 24 are at
especially high risk for bacterial meningitis since it can be spread by
coughing, sneezing, kissing, sharing drinking glasses and other
behaviors where people are in very close contact. College students are
particularly at risk since they live in tight quarters and often have
weakened immune systems due to lack of sleep. In
January 2005, the Food and Drug Administration approved a new vaccine
against bacterial meningitis. The MCV4 Meningococcal Conjugate Vaccine,
marketed under the name Menactra, protects against four very common
bacterial strains and is longer lasting and more effective than earlier
meningitis vaccines. The Centers for Disease Control recommends that
everyone ages 11 to 18 should get it, as well as those headed off to
live in college dorms or going into the military. But in 2006, only 12
percent of teenagers got the vaccine. So why isn’t everyone in this age group
getting vaccinated? The answers are the same ones that continue to
haunt vaccines — unjustified safety concerns, resistance to mandates
and cost. When
Menactra first appeared, some cases of Guillain-Barre syndrome were
reported. This is a serious disease in which the body’s immune system
attacks nerves and leads to gradual, temporary paralysis. Those
opposed to vaccination — and there are many in the United States and
other countries — quickly pointed to the 20 cases that were reported as
a reason not to get vaccinated. But
Guillain-Barre occurs in about one in 100,000 people in the United
States. Vaccination is almost never the cause. In fact, when the 20
cases cited by vaccine critics were closely examined, none were
associated with the meningitis vaccination. 23 states require shots Today, 23 states mandate the vaccine for college freshmen. Americans
are generally leery of requiring or mandating vaccines. They value
informed choice. But do you really want to leave an issue as important
as vaccination left up to busy college freshmen to think about?
Menectra is safe, so it’s hard to know why anyone living in a dorm or
close quarters would not want to get vaccinated. And
if you don’t get vaccinated then you are not only putting yourself at
risk but others whom you come in contact with on and off campus as
well.
What is really startling is that mandating
vaccines really only means strongly urging young people to get them.
Most states recognize the right of anyone to refuse a vaccine on
religious grounds. And even the states that have required or mandated
vaccination allow someone not to do so if they sign a statement saying
they have seen information about meningitis vaccine but still don’t
want the shot. Getting insurance to pay The
real reason to mandate meningitis vaccine is to get it into the heads
of kids and parents that this is an important thing to do and to help
force government and insurance companies to pay the cost. If you don’t
mandate vaccines then insurers often won’t pay for them. In our screwy
world of health care, mandates have more to do with reimbursement then
they do the police blocking access to the dorm until you show your
vaccination card. Americans
do love choice. But they also hate to lose a child, a sister or a
granddaughter. Sometimes choice ought to yield to common sense and
evidence. We ought be doing all we can to get young people vaccinated
against meningitis and to make sure that the costs of doing so are
covered.
Posted: 2007-09-06 |