December 2, 2013
Since ACSH was founded in 1978, we have been proponents of the view that
vaccines are arguably the greatest achievement in public health, reducing death
and disability more than any scientific discovery. Now, a new study published in The New
England Journal of Medicine confirms that point, finding that
childhood vaccination programs have prevented more than 100 million cases of
serious contagious disease in the United States since 1924.
Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh examined
reports dating back to the 19th century, which recorded details regarding 56
diseases. The journal article included reports covering polio, measles,
rubella, mumps, hepatitis A, diphtheria and whooping cough. They compared the
reports from before and after vaccines for those diseases became available to
the public to estimate the number of prevented cases of disease due to
vaccines. And although death rates were not included in the report because they
were not reliably reported until the 1960s, Dr. Donald S. Burke, the dean of
Pittsburgh’s graduate school of public health and an author of the journal
article, estimates that the number of prevented deaths would be three to four
million…..To Read More….
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