Bibliographic Information

Vaccines

Kristen A. Feemster

(What everyone needs to know)

Oxford University Press, c2018

  • : hbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [167]-174) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Immunization is regarded by many as one of the greatest advances in modern civilization. The widespread use of vaccines has led to increases in life expectancy, reductions in the occurrence of childhood diseases, and is generally credited with saving millions of lives annually. But since their discovery two centuries ago, vaccines have been dogged by pockets of persistent distrust among those who are skeptical of their science or who find compulsory immunization at odds with personal liberty. The rise of these voices in contemporary culture has contributed to trends of vaccine delay and vaccine hesitancy in some communities - a chasm between the general population and the scientific establishment that has persisted and grown at times across the last several decades. VACCINES: What Everyone Needs to Know (R) offers a scientifically grounded overview of the science, manufacture, and culture of vaccines in the United States and internationally. Aiming to offer an unbiased resource on this hotly debated subject, it provides accessible, authoritative overviews of the following: * How vaccines work * The history of vaccines * Vaccine policy - who writes it, and does it matter? * The contents and manufacture of vaccines * Vaccine injury * The alleged link between vaccines and autism * Vaccines and new outbreaks Written by a leading authority in both infectious disease and vaccine education, this book offers a clear-eyed resource for parents or anyone with an interest in the use, efficacy, and controversy surrounding vaccines. In a subject area defined by partisanship, it offers reliable resource for what everyone needs to know.

Table of Contents

SECTION 1: VACCINES AND IMMUNIZATION: BASIC PRINCIPLES 1. What is a vaccine? 2. A brief history of vaccines 3. How are vaccines developed? 4. Vaccine financing: who pays for all of this? 5. How is vaccine safety monitored and ensured? SECTION 2: THE IMMUNIZATION SCHEDULE 6. Immunization schedules SECTION 3: VACCINE POLICY: OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES 7. Laws and Standard Practices for Vaccine Administration 8. Vaccine Hesitancy SECTION 4: FUTURE DIRECTIONS 9. Vaccine development 10. Vaccines in the Developing World 11. Disease eradication SECTION 5: APPENDIX Childhood, Adolescent and Adult Immunization Schedules Current Adult Schedule

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