Some doctors won't see patients with anti-vaccine views
By ALICIA CHANG
|
||
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- With
California gripped by a measles outbreak, Dr. Charles Goodman posted a clear
notice in his waiting room and on Facebook: His practice will no longer see children
whose parents won't get them vaccinated.
"Parents who choose not to
give measles shots, they're not just putting their kids at risk, but they're
also putting other kids at risk - especially kids in my waiting room,"
the Los Angeles pediatrician said.
It's a sentiment echoed by a small
number of doctors who in recent years have "fired" patients who
continue to believe debunked research linking vaccines to autism. They hope
the strategy will lead parents to change their minds; if that fails, they hope
it will at least reduce the risk to other children in the office.
The tough-love approach - which
comes amid the nation's second-biggest measles outbreak in at least 15 years,
with at least 98 cases reported since last month - raises questions about
doctors' ethical responsibilities. Most of the measles cases have been traced
directly or indirectly to Disneyland in Southern California.
The American Academy of Pediatrics
says doctors should bring up the importance of vaccinations during visits but
should respect a parent's wishes unless there's a significant risk to the
child.
"In general, pediatricians
should avoid discharging patients from their practices solely because a
parent refuses to immunize his or her child," according to guidelines
issued by the group.
However, if the relationship
between patient and doctor becomes unworkable, the pediatrics academy says,
the doctor may want to encourage the vaccine refuser to go to another
physician.
Some mothers who have been dropped
by their doctors feel "betrayed and upset," said Dotty Hagmier,
founder of the support group Moms in Charge. She said these parents made up
their minds about vaccines after "careful research and diligence to
understand the risks versus the benefits for their own children's circumstances."
Dropping patients who refuse
vaccines has become a hot topic of discussion on SERMO, an online doctor
hangout. Some doctors are adamant about not accepting patients who don't
believe in vaccinations, with some saying they don't want to be responsible
for someone's death from an illness that was preventable.
Others warn that refusing
treatment to such people will just send them into the arms of quacks.
The measles-mumps-rubella vaccine,
or MMR, is 97 percent effective at preventing measles, according to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Measles spreads easily through the
air and in enclosed spaces. Symptoms include fever, runny nose, cough and a
rash all over the body. In rare cases, particularly among babies, measles can
be deadly. Infection can also cause pregnant women to miscarry or give birth
prematurely.
All states require children to get
certain vaccinations to enroll in school. California is among 20 states that
let parents opt out by obtaining personal belief waivers. Some people worry
that vaccines cause developmental problems, despite scientific evidence
disproving any link. Others object for religious or philosophical reasons.
Nationally, childhood measles
vaccination rates have held steady for years at above 90 percent. But there
seem to be growing pockets of unvaccinated people in scattered communities,
said Dr. Gregory Wallace of the CDC.
In recent years, nearly all U.S.
measles cases have been linked to travelers who caught the virus abroad and
spread it in this country among unvaccinated people.
Northern California's Marin County
has a high rate of people claiming personal belief exemptions. In 2012, Dr.
Nelson Branco and his partners at a Marin County practice started turning
away toddlers whose parents refused to make sure they received the measles
vaccine.
Branco said 10 to 20 of his
practice's 8,000 or so patients left after the change.
Vaccines "can be spooky for
parents," Branco said. But "in the end, we have the science. We
have the experience that it's the right thing to do."
---
AP Medical Writer Mike Stobbe
contributed to this report.
|
||
|
Translate
Saturday, January 31, 2015
Some doctors won't see patients with anti-vaccine views
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment