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US doctors giving in to anti-vax requests

Doctors commonly get requests from parents to delay young children's vaccinations – and despite their better judgement, they often give in, a new US study finds. In a national survey of paediatricians and family doctors, researchers found that 93% said they handled such requests in a typical month. One-fifth said that at least 10 percent of parents they see want to postpone some vaccinations. And while most doctors believe that veering from the recommended vaccine schedule is risky, they often agree to parents' wishes.

Medicinenet reports that the findings come at a time of rising concerns about "under-vaccination." One issue is that some parents choose not to vaccinate their children at all, for religious reasons or personal beliefs – often related to unfounded fears over vaccine safety, doctors say. But few parents actually go that route, said Dr Allison Kempe, a pediatrician at Children's Hospital Colorado, who led the new study. More often, she said, they ask to postpone certain shots, and "spread out" their child's vaccinations over a longer period.

Under the current vaccination schedule recommended by the CDC and other groups, a child gets up to 25 shots in the first two years of life, including multiple shots in one doctor visit. Some parents fear that it's "too many, too soon," because they've heard that all those jabs "overwhelm" a baby's immune system, said Dr. Paul Offit, an infectious disease specialist at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. "But there's no science behind that idea," said Offit, who was not involved in the new study. Worse, he added, delaying certain shots "only increases the amount of time that kids are susceptible to disease."

Of the 534 doctors surveyed, 87% said they believe that parents who request delays are putting their children’s health at risk. Another 84% said that spreading out youngsters' shots causes needless additional pain. Despite that, most doctors yielded to parents' wishes, the study found. One-third often or always agreed to spread out vaccinations, while another third said they did so sometimes.

It's not that they simply caved, Kempe said. Most doctors said they'd tried various persuasion tactics: Telling parents they'd vaccinated their own kids; warning about the disease risks; and stressing that "alternative" vaccine schedules have not been proven safe or effective. But those attempts were only "somewhat effective," at best, doctors said. "I think it's important to try to influence parents before their vaccine concerns have set in," Kempe said. One way to do that, she added, could be through education during pregnancy. There also should be a greater focus on countering vaccine misinformation, Kempe said.

Offit said he doesn't blame parents for being confused or hesitant about vaccines. "All of these vaccines are against diseases that parents today have never seen, and they involve biological substances that most people don't understand," he said. As for doctors who give in to parents' requests, Offit doesn't blame them, either. They have limited time during an office visit to explain why the recommended vaccine schedule should be followed – and if parents are already convinced otherwise, there's only so much a doctor can do, Offit noted.

[link url="http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=187192"]Full Medicinenet report[/link]
[link url="http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/early/2015/02/24/peds.2014-3474.abstract?sid=0664faec-8f5a-400a-8a82-4180f0f57559"]Pediatrics abstract[/link]

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