Vaccination: A Key Piece of the Puzzle. Nothing protects babies better from more than 14 serious diseases by age 2.
Babies are on the move-- visiting grocery stores, playgrounds and other places with their parents and caregivers. As they come into contact with others, babies can be exposed to serious diseases, like measles and whooping cough:
The Immunization Baby Book: Flipping through this baby book, you can learn what vaccines babies need, when they're needed, and why it's so important to follow CDC's recommended immunization schedule.
For more information about vaccines, visit http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/parents
Showing posts with label Immunization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Immunization. Show all posts
Medicine's first Nobel laureate
Behring’s unabashed pursuit of financial rewards for his efforts — unusual in that era—drew much criticism. One of the first modern medical entrepreneurs, he aggressively sought to patent his discoveries, and profited handsomely from their applications. This conflicted with the more genteel notions that prevailed at the time, which venerated physicians as selfless servants of mankind.
For all his accomplishments, Behring was a deeply troubled man. He suffered from frequent bouts of profound depression, and was institutionalised several times.
The great discoverer of serum therapy died of pneumonia in Marburg on March 31, 1917.
References:
Emil von Behring (1854-1917): Medicine's first Nobel laureate. Singapore Med J. 2011 Jan;52(1):1-2 (free full text PDF).
Labels:
History,
Immunization,
Immunology
FDA: Rotarix rotavirus vaccine contains DNA from a "harmless" pig virus and should not be used
GlaxoSmithKline confirmed that the pig virus, porcine circovirus type 1 or PCV-1, has been in the vaccine since it was developed.75% of U.S. doctors prescribe the three-dose RotaTeq vaccine, made by Merck, which was approved in 2006.
Electron micrograph of Rotaviruses. Image source: Wikipedia, Environmental Protection Agency, public domain.
Rotavirus-related diarrhea used to cause 70,000 hospitalizations per year in the U.S. before the introduction of the vaccines. The first vaccine against the virus called RotaShield was withdrawn from the market due to reports of an intestinal blockage (intussusception) associated with its use.
References:
Pig Virus DNA Found in Rotavirus Vaccine. WebMD.
References:
Pig Virus DNA Found in Rotavirus Vaccine. WebMD.
Image source: GSKsource.com.
Now There’s Pig Virus DNA in Merck’s Rotavirus Vaccine, Too. WSJ, 2010.
Updated: 05/06/2010
Labels:
Immunization,
Immunology,
Pediatrics,
Vaccines
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