Hi excited mom

I hesitated to reply as I didn't want to be perceived as flaming. I am not criticizing your choice, and I'm certainly not questioning your right to choose. However, I had to respond to the idea that if you haven't heard of it, how can it be such a big deal. You see, I hear that every day. I am a pediatric nurse, and each day at work I hear parents say just that, in shock and disbelief. Whether it's a common infection - the parent exclaims she has never heard of that bacteria, how can it be common (I want to ask her how many bacteria she HAS heard of? But of course, I don't

) - or a lacerated liver from a child wearing a lap belt only - the parent is certain that such a thing is unbelievably rare, because they have never heard of it.
I have personally cared for kids with pneumonia and encephalitis from the chicken pox virus. I have to be careful what I say because of federal patient privacy laws, but I am not giving any names or ages, or any kind of identifying information. Just that these are not some kind of urban legend "friend of a neighbor's uncle" kind of people, they are real. I cared for them with my own hands. One child actually lost both legs due to chicken pox. Obviously most kids get chicken pox and recover without any problems. Out of every 1 million people with chicken pox, 2500 have serious problems and 25 will die. The rest will be fine. So the chance of you knowing someone personally who died from it is extremely small.
You do have to do the research yourself and decide what's best for your family and your child. If you feel the risks outweigh the benefits of immunizing against chicken pox, choosing not to immunize is your right as a parent. I hope, however, that you have chosen to immunize your child against the more deadly diseases such as polio and HIB. Again, it is your choice.

I have a friend who distrusts all vaccines and her child is totally unimmunized. The fact that most other children are immunized ("herd immunity") protects her child. (and her choice is just something we don't discuss. We both know how the other feels - no need to debate it, we can still be friends

)
As for the OP, I still vote for either doing the shot 6 weeks before you go or waiting until you get back. I think the risk of exposing someone in WDW is too high. Or if you decide not to immunize, you can get a waiver for it going against your personal beliefs. Obviously I am pro-vaccination, but I urge you to make your own choice based on medical facts, not a school requirement. Schools can't MAKE you do anything
Laurie
