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Give Babies Hepatitis B Vaccine, Urges Mac Professor

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  • Give Babies Hepatitis B Vaccine, Urges Mac Professor

    GIVE BABIES HEPATITIS B VACCINE, URGES MAC PROFESSOR
    by Vivien Fellegi

    The Hamilton Spectator
    February 10, 2009 Tuesday
    Canada

    McMaster University researchers are urging Canada to adopt universal
    hepatitis B immunization in infancy.

    A comprehensive new analysis of existing studies supports the hepatitis
    B vaccination for all Canadian babies, says Dr. Christopher Mackie,
    an assistant professor of clinical epidemiology and biostatistics at
    Mac and the associate Medical Officer of Health at Hamilton Public
    Health Services.

    Mackie and his Mac colleagues, as well as researchers at the University
    of British Columbia who helped carry out the analysis, also noted
    that B.C. medical data show the success of that province's infancy
    vaccination program.

    That's why the Canadian Liver Foundation supports their recommendation
    and is urging all of Canada to implement universal hepatitis B
    vaccination for infants.

    The analysis and recommendations were published in a recent issue of
    the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

    Foundation chairman Dr. Kevork Peltekian said, "This is an excellent
    study taking us in the right direction."

    Chronic hepatitis B, a viral disease of the liver, affects about
    300,000 Canadians, said Peltekian. But it is preventable through
    vaccination. Currently, adolescents in Grade 7 are routinely vaccinated
    in Ontario. But infants are still vulnerable.

    Many people think hepatitis B can only be passed to children during
    pregnancy or to adults through injected drugs or sexual contact,
    said Mackie. So they don't see any reason to vaccinate children,
    said Peltekian.

    But the problem is that kids can contract it in their homes,
    neighbourhoods and schools. The virus can be passed through a bite
    or even by a kiss landing on a cut, he said.

    The majority of adults recover fully from the illness, said
    Mackie. Only 1 to 5 per cent of them will carry the hepatitis B virus
    in their blood and body fluids permanently, said Mackie.

    However, the situation is very different for children, said Mackie.

    Unlike adults, children find it much harder to shake off the virus. Up
    to 90 cent of kids with hepatitis B will be stuck with it permanently,
    meaning they could suffer complications such as liver failure and
    liver cancer, said Mackie.

    "It's one of the reasons it's important to protect infants."

    Besides safeguarding individual children, immunizing everyone makes
    it harder for the virus to spread from person to person. This results
    in a collective protection called herd immunity, said Mackie.

    Once patients have contracted chronic hepatitis B, they can be treated
    with drugs. But while the therapies control the virus, "they are
    unable to get rid of it and are quite expensive," said Peltekian.

    He said the vaccine has few if any side-effects, and the cost of
    giving the vaccine at birth "is not different whether you're giving
    it at adolescence (or) at birth."

    Peltekian said there may even be some savings because nurses won't
    be required to give vaccines at schools.

    Any infancy vaccination program must be approved by the National
    Advisory Committee on Immunization.

    The Canadian Liver Foundation hopes the new study will bolster the
    case for universal hepatitis B vaccination for infants.
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