Tetanus Vaccine
Why You Should Second Guess
the Tetanus Vaccine
On Wednesday, February 23, 2005,
my daughter was bitten pretty severely by a cat. Since the wound was gaping, I
immediately called the pediatrician to see if they do stitches. "No," the nurse
said, "but is your child up to date on vaccines?" I told her no; the last shots
she had were at the age of six months. "She will need to have a tetanus shot,
then. Make sure you tell the doctor in the ER that her vaccines are not up to
date."
Thinking that her arm was going
to fall off if we didn't get this shot, we took off for the hospital with a
child you would never guess was wounded at all. It's really hard to get a two
year-old to lie on the floor, moaning and groaning, to get us in faster, so we
sat in the waiting room and watched lots of people go ahead of us. She danced
around, entertaining the moaners and groaners. Oddly, they were just not amused.
Finally, it was our turn. At our
closest hospital, the pediatric services do not open until 4 pm. So when the ER
doctor looked at her arm and said she didn't need stitches, I was very
interested in having a pediatrician look at the wound. Maybe this doctor was
used to looking at large, gaping adult wounds and didn't realize that our son
had gotten stitches for a smaller wound a couple of years before. I became even
more alarmed when he said she did not need a tetanus shot. He was going to just
let her arm fall off!
Once the doctor left the room, my
husband and I went back and forth a little bit, then asked for a pediatrician
when the nurse came in. Of course, the original doctor came back when he heard
this request and wanted to know what the "problem" was. I missed most of this
dialogue as I was already on the phone with the pediatrician to find out about
the vaccine...but we did find out that standard protocol for cat bites is to not
sew the wound. It would be taped with steri-tape so that any infection could
drain out of her wound; sewing it closed would leave no escape for fluids (pus)
to leave her body, causing more problems. Okay, I could buy that.
Now keep in mind that I am
against vaccinations. So why I had the pediatrician on the phone to make sure
she DID need the vaccine is beyond me. Maybe it was the stress. Maybe I had
horror stories in my mind, and just "knew" that when you have an injury such as
this, you are supposed to get a tetanus shot...right? What I picked up from the
phone conversation with the pediatrician's office is that they weren't concerned
that she get a tetanus shot for her injury. They just wanted her updated on her
shots.
It then occurred to me that I
could ask for just the tetanus portion of the DTaP vaccine. Then I came to my
senses...how do I know the tetanus vaccine is safe? I'd heard about the
pertussis vaccine problems, but never did I worry about the tetanus
vaccine. I decided to go home and read on the internet about this vaccine before
heading to the pediatrician.
And guess what I found? Lots of
interesting information that I am going to share with you. One site in
particular, and I will share some information below from various sources on this
site. Needless to say, my daughter did not get the tetanus vaccine.
http://www.nccn.net/~wwithin/tetanus.htm
From
http://66.70.140.217/v/tetanus.html : (Link no longer works;
my apologies)
Tetanus as a clinical entity is linked to a bacteria,
Clostridium tetani. Obviously, the germ is not as malicious as one may think
because it lives as a harmless commensal in the animal and human intestinal
tract (1). It is not the very presence of the bacteria which causes the trouble,
but the toxins that are produced by the bacteria under anaerobic conditions,
that is, where the bacteria operates in an environment free of oxygen. These
toxins can be spread through the blood vessels and finally affect the nervous
system causing tetanic muscle contraction and pain. The condition is extremely
painful and potentially lethal.
Tetanus morbidity is very low in industrial countries.
In the USA, for example, there are only about 50 cases a year (2); in Germany,
17 (3).
Mortality figures range between 33% (4) and 20% (2).
The incidence is higher in tropical countries and under poor hygienic
conditions. Mortality is 135 times higher in developing countries compared to
developed countries. In those countries, tetanus in newborns plays a very
important rote. Most of those cases are caused by using dirty, rusty scissors
when cutting the umbilical string of the newborn.
Prophylaxis against tetanus raises serious theoretical
and, above all, practical questions, since the disease itself is known not to
induce immunity. If the disease cannot induce protection, how can a vaccine?
Antibody levels do not rise until 4 days after
vaccination (5), so vaccination at the time of injury is of no use.
My daughter's wound did get infected, as most cat bite
wounds do. She was on an antibiotic (another thing I'm not crazy about) but we
loaded her up with
vitamins to counteract the effect
the antibiotics would have on her body. The infection quickly improved and she
is now almost completely healed. I am sharing this information with you because
if you are reading from my site, you likely have a child. And you probably
already know that there will be boo-boos, and blood will be shed at some point
in your child's life. Whether you decide to vaccinate your child or not, do not
do it without reading all the facts, and PLEASE don't do anything because your
doctor said so. These doctors didn't agree...and for that I am glad because it
made me check a third source!
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