sara74 said:
Was just about to post re the new vaccine myself! There was a vaccine a few years ago but it was pulled from the market as it had some bad side effects. That scared me, I was a participant in the vaccine development trials in college. Medical guinea pig for $.
The old vaccine was associated with a type of bowel obstruction called intussusception. It is a disorder that normally affects 1 in 3,000 infants in the first year of life.
With the Rotavirus vaccine, there was 1 excess case of intussusception per 32,000 vaccinated infants. Intussusception is a serious disorder that occurs when the intestine collapses in on itself like a retractable antenna. This cuts off its blood supply and can lead to perforation. On the other hand, few infants in the USA (50-60 each year) die from rotavirus because of easy access to IV fluids. Because Intussusception was deemed more dangerous than rotavirus (in the USA), the vaccine was withdrawn from the market.
Unfortunately, the rotavirus story is different in third world countries where 1,600 infants die EACH DAY from rotavirus dehydration! This is primarily due to lack of access to IV fluids.
The makers of the new rotavirus vaccine have tested it in 70,000 infants and found NO increase in the rates of intussusception. It won FDA approval, but has not yet been recommended by the CDC or AAP. They will probably recommend it by the end of the year.
Their recommendation is important to get insurance companies to pay for the vaccine. It's an expensive one--wholesale cost is $187.50 for the series of 3 doses.
Will this help reduce the number of deaths in third world countries? Only if someone will pay for it.