Why might a CDC panel stop recommending it?
Alex Lee suffered for years because of a chronic hepatitis B
infection.
RFK Jr. is the problem. He thinks vaccines are bad
but taking his grandkids to swim in sewage,
despite warning signs, is fine.
Like many people with chronic hepatitis B, Lee contracted
the virus from his mother during birth. Lee didn't learn he was infected until
he was 40, when his mother underwent a liver transplant due to organ failure
caused by hepatitis B.
By the time Lee was diagnosed, he already had advanced
cirrhosis, a serious liver disease. He has since undergone surgery to remove
growths on his liver, followed by chemotherapy to treat liver cancer caused by
the virus, as well as a liver transplant. Although Lee is healthy today at 68,
he will need to take anti-rejection drugs for the rest of his life to prevent
his immune system from attacking his new liver.
Yet Lee considers himself lucky; he doesn't need to worry
that his children will develop the same disease. All three were vaccinated
against hepatitis B, the first anti-cancer vaccine approved in the United
States.
"I would recommend all babies take the
vaccination," said Lee, a volunteer health educator for San Francisco Hep
B Free, a nonprofit that educates community members about hepatitis B. "I
was lucky that I found out early and that my liver cancer was not
advanced."
A 99% drop in hepatitis B
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) first
recommended vaccinating all babies against hepatitis B at birth in 1991. Since
then, chronic hepatitis B infections in children and adolescents have fallen by 99%.
A study published in 2022 found that US children who
received the vaccines as newborns were 22% less likely to die from
any cause.
The universal birth dose of hepatitis vaccine "has been
incredibly effective,” said Ravi Jhaveri, MD, head of infectious diseases
at Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago. “The US is in many ways is an
envy of the world because we have been able to do this."
Since 1991, the universal HBV birth dose has prevented more than
500,000 childhood infections and prevented an estimated 90,100
childhood deaths, according to a joint statement from the American Public
Health Association and 72 public health experts that was submitted as a public
comment in response to an upcoming meeting of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices (ACIP).





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