Posts Tagged ‘vaccinate’

Vaccines & the Social Contract

December 14th, 2012

At the core- vaccines are really about community protection.  Our public health system depends on a solid network of providers that are available to vaccinate kids for all of the nasty infectious diseases that have plagued humanity for millennium. It’s not just access to care and a solid network of providers that vaccinate that are important- we also need folks to fulfill their social contract. In other words, we need just about everybody to participate and get vaccinated in order to get the herd immunity we all need to eliminate the spread of infectious vaccine-preventable diseases.  Vaccinating yourself and your kids is more about community protection than personal protection.  It’s a social contract that we have with each other to keep all of us healthy- just like it’s everyone’s responsibility to be a Good Samaritan when you see a car crash. 

For decades vaccination rates in the US and AZ have been pretty good.  The problems we had were due to the lack of access to care.  Low vaccination rates were mainly in low income areas where folks weren’t able to get to the doctor on time to get their shots or didn’t have insurance.  Over the decades, the public health and healthcare systems have closed many of those gaps- and immunization rates responded.  But now we have a new problem- more and more parents are purposely deciding to not vaccinate their kids.  The trend is increasingly jeopardizing us all.  It’s called a “personal exemption”. 

In order to figure out what to do next, we began working with the UA College of Public Health to find out the who, what, when, where, and why of this group of parents that are increasingly deciding to not vaccinate their kids.   Today the UA investigators published a preliminary report in the Journal Vaccine that gives us some insight into this population. 

The research team used data about personal exemptions from our 2010- 2011 kindergarten Immunization Data Report and linked it to data about education statistics to determine if there are similarities between the areas where there are more exemptions.  They found that schools where mostly white students attended, those with fewer students who use free and reduced lunch, and charter schools were more likely to have high exemption rates.  There are geographic differences too – those in the northern part of the state were more likely to have personal exemptions than those in the south – and the number of exemptions increased from west to east. 

These geographic and demographic details are important in designing the right intervention to help bring up herd immunity in the state.  This information will help the AZ public health system to improve the vaccination uptake and pay close attention to those areas if there is a disease outbreak.  A follow-up study is on the way that’ll look in more depth into why parents are increasingly choosing “personal exemptions” over vaccination.  We hope to use the combined data to develop intervention strategies to improve immunization rates moving forward.

New Earache & Pneumonia Shot

February 26th, 2010

This week, the FDA approved and the CDC has recommended the use of a new vaccine called Prevnar 13™ for healthy kids children age 2-59 months.  The new shot prevents invasive pneumococcal disease from 13 different kinds of pneumonia germs. It also prevents many germs that cause middle ear infections and some kinds of meningitis.   It’s also exciting that it now covers something called the 19A serotype, which is the fastest growing serotype for invasive pneumococcal disease, and particularly impacts Native American children.  You can see more on the FDA website.

New Earache & Pneumonia Shot

February 26th, 2010

This week, the FDA approved and the CDC has recommended the use of a new vaccine called Prevnar 13™ for healthy kids children age 2-59 months.  The new shot prevents invasive pneumococcal disease from 13 different kinds of pneumonia germs. It also prevents many germs that cause middle ear infections and some kinds of meningitis.   It’s also exciting that it now covers something called the 19A serotype, which is the fastest growing serotype for invasive pneumococcal disease, and particularly impacts Native American children.  You can see more on the FDA website.

H1N1

February 12th, 2010


When’s the last time you heard anything about the pandemic?  It’s been awhile, huh?  Well, it’s still around.  The number of cases is back down to where it was this summer, with cases here and there.  Nothing like it was last October- but the flu is still out there.  We’re still encouraging the stragglers to get vaccinated… and the best place to find a vaccine is still at www.stopthespreadaz.org. You can see the latest Weekly Flu Updateon our H1N1 website.  We had 1 more lab confirmed H1N1 death last week, bringing the total number of deaths directly attributable to H1N1 to 146 since April.

Adult Vaccination Rates

February 8th, 2010


The Trust for America’s Health released a report about adult immunization rates across the country last week at: healthyamericans.org.  The Complete Report (PDF 0.2Mb) provides all of the details…  but for a snapshot, the report says that about 69% of Arizona’s seniors have been vaccinated for pneumococcal disease.

Vaccinations are an important part of public health strategy.  When people are vaccinated, it not only protects them from catching that virus, it reduces the chance they will infect someone else.  The term herd immunity means enough people are immune to a disease through vaccination or exposure that a community is protected from a major outbreak.

Arizonans can learn what vaccinations are available to them and their family on the ADHS website.

It is not too late to get seasonal and H1N1 influenza vaccines.  Find out where at StoptheSpreadaz.com

A Year of Progress at ADHS

February 4th, 2010

We started on this journey together a year ago.  Thanks for being such good traveling companions.  We’ve been through a lot.  We’ve had challenges, fears, anxiety, good times, laughs, & fun.  We’ve sacrificed some of our programs, but we’ve made a great deal of progress too.  Overall- the year was a net plus.  I say that because we maximized our progress in areas that we have control.

We’ve made a great deal of progress in many areas and have just done a plain old good job with most everything this year.  I jotted down a few things the came to mind below.  We:

  • Overhauled the WIC program to focus on a much more nutritious blend of foods www.azwic.gov, and started a nationwide movement to change the food stamp program (SNAP) from a calorie program to a nutrition program;
  • Created the new Empower Pack program for preschools that improve physical activity and nutrition for our youngest- an idea that came out of our licensing fee increase;
  • Developed a network of more than 20 new Cardiac Arrest Centers and Primary Stroke
    Centers across the state that are dramatically improving outcomes for folks that have a cardiac arrest or a stroke;
  • Led the national shift to continuous chest compression CPR from the old compression/breathing method http://www.azshare.gov/;
  • Figured out a way to vaccinate underinsured kids through our Vaccine for Children Program even though our state vaccination funds were completely eliminated;
  • Began development of Arizona’s TRAUMA SYSTEM- adding 8 new Level IV Trauma Centers and 1 new nationally recognized pediatric trauma center;
  • Helped develop a state of the art on-line Outcomes Dashboard to give choice and voice to folks with serious mental illnesses in Maricopa County- improving their ability to better participate ion their path to Recovery (Download the Dashboard);
  • Made a difference in hundreds of peoples lives at the Arizona State Hospital-  by helping them in their road to recovery by treating them with dignity, care and respect;
  • Converted our licensing programs to become self sufficient, and sharpened our surveys to focus on the most important elements of care, and allowing folks to review the latest scores using our Facility Search tool;
  • Identified hundreds of kids with metabolic disorders and hearing and helped their doctors conduct interventions to help them avoid serious complications from their condition through our Newborn Screening program;
  • Tested thousands of biological samples for all kinds of viruses and bacteria including H1N1, tuberculosis, West Nile virus, rabies, and literally dozens of other diseases so that counties and doctors can help slow the spread of disease and help people get better in our Public Health Microbiology program;
  • Ensured that hundreds of clinical and environmental laboratories across the state are doing things right and providing good results through our Laboratory Licensure & Certification program;
  • Created an inter-disciplinary team from around the Department to develop an integrated tobacco prevention program together- expanding our tobacco prevention efforts way beyond it’s former borders- integrating tobacco control into programs throughout AZ’s behavioral health system.

Holy smokes… who did all this stuff?  ADHS did.  Thanks to the staff for rowing in the same direction together this year- forward.  Next year will have challenges just like this past year— but as long as we work and collaborate with one another we will  continue to press ahead and make progress next year too.  Thanks, and take a second this week to thank the folks around you, and let them know you appreciate their help this year.