Letters from Maine

Fearful pictures


 

References

Much has been written lately about religious and antiscience (or at least junk science) aspects of vaccine refusal. I don’t recall seeing much, if anything, said about just plain old needle fear. I suspect that many vaccine decliners are hiding (consciously or unconsciously) their fear of injections under the cloak of “intellectual” or religious choice. By continuing to use the kinds of fear-mongering images I have described, journalists are fueling the vaccine refusal debate.

How about you and I who provide immunizations on a regular basis adopt a policy of refusing to allow pictures from our offices to be taken immunizing uncooperative or terrified children? Or at least journalists should be forced publish three images of contented vaccine recipients for every photograph of a screaming child. Or, even better, how about a one-for-one arrangement that shows one child in the intensive care unit as the result of a vaccine-preventable illness for every crying injection recipient?

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” E-mail him at pdnews@frontlinemedcom.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

MMRV combo vaccine is about as safe as separate MMR and varicella shots
MDedge Pediatrics
CDC: Flu remains widespread; antivirals underutilized
MDedge Pediatrics
So far, flu vaccine only 23% effective
MDedge Pediatrics
Incidences of underimmunization, vaccine refusal are clustered geographically
MDedge Pediatrics
Recommended vaccination schedule not followed in 1 of 4 children
MDedge Pediatrics
Pertussis persists
MDedge Pediatrics
New immunization schedule moving online, but changes are minor
MDedge Pediatrics
Second group B meningitis vaccine wins FDA nod of approval
MDedge Pediatrics
U.S. measles cases reached postelimination high in 2014
MDedge Pediatrics
CDC: Suspect measles when seeing fever and rash
MDedge Pediatrics