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- 1From:Pediatric News (Vol. 48, Issue 1)FROM JAMA PEDIATRICS Measles-containing vaccines are less likely to be associated with seizures when given at 12-15 months of age as recommended than when delayed until 16-23 months of age. In the retrospective...
- 2From:Nature Medicine (Vol. 17, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedJan 5 An investigative piece by journalist Brian Deer accused the disgraced British researcher Andrew Wakefield of flubbing data in his now-retracted 1998 Lancet paper that purportedly found a link between the...
- 3From:Bulletin of the World Health Organization (Vol. 83, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedTwo surveys of maternal mortality conducted in Egypt, in 1992-93 and in 2000, collected data from a representative sample of health bureaus covering all of Egypt, except for five frontier governorates which were covered...
- 4From:Clin Alert (Vol. 44, Issue 21)No. 297 A study consisting of 1800 children identified through a rural health maintenance organization was conducted to evaluate the incidence of common adverse events following first and second doses of...
- 5From:Pediatrics (Vol. 113, Issue 5) Peer-Reviewed"A leading medical journal said yesterday it should not have published a controversial 1998 study that claimed a link between childhood vaccinations and autism. The editor of the Lancet, Dr Richard Horton, said Dr...
- 6From:British Medical Journal (Vol. 323, Issue 7323) Peer-ReviewedDoctor cleared over using measles jabs instead of MMR: The General Medical Council has refused to take action over Dr Peter Mansfield, a Lincolnshire GP, who allowed parents to choose the single measles vaccine rather...
- 7From:British Medical Journal (Vol. 323, Issue 7315) Peer-ReviewedExperts have declared that the current fad among some parents to give their children single injections against measles, mumps, and rubella rather than the triple MMR vaccine is a "backward step" that could endanger...
- 8From:British Medical Journal (Vol. 323, Issue 7309) Peer-ReviewedWorcestershire Health Authority is wrong The referral by Worcestershire Health Authority of Dr Peter Mansfield to the General Medical Council raises some important issues for doctors and patients. Dr Mansfield is a...
- 9From:British Medical Journal (Vol. 323, Issue 7308) Peer-ReviewedThe doctor who referred a colleague providing single vaccines for measles, mumps, and rubella to the General Medical Council has defended his actions as the only available way of raising issues of patients' safety in...
- 10From:Journal of Medical Ethics (Vol. 29, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe extraordinary events surrounding the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine in the United Kingdom have not only placed in jeopardy the use of this triple vaccine but have also spread concern to other parts of the...
- 11From:Expert Review of Anti-infective Therapy (Vol. 1, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedEithne MacMahon of Guy's and St. Thomas' Hospital (London, UK) has warned that outbreaks of measles resulting from a drop in uptake of measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccination are putting organ transplant patients...
- 12From:Practice NurseA UNIQUE immunisation course has been developed to give healthcare practitioners more confidence when talking to parents about the need to vaccinate their children. The ten-week module has been set up jointly by the...
- 13From:Practice NurseSo the MMR immunisation controversy has raised its ugly head once more. Practice nurses and GPs are again being faced with parents' concerns that the jab will harm their children, following extensive reports throughout...
- 14From:Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week2018 JUL 14 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week -- Investigators discuss new findings in Immunization - Vaccines. According to news reporting out of Perugia, Italy, by...
- 15From:Mayo Clinic Proceedings (Vol. 95, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedAbstract In addition to the vaccines due in the first year of life, the US Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommends that children continue to receive vaccines regularly against a variety of infectious...
- 16From:Virology Journal (Vol. 10, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground Mumps virus (MuV) is a highly infectious paramyxovirus closely related to measles virus (MeV). Despite the availability of a mumps vaccine, outbreaks continue to occur and no treatment options are...
- 17From:Infectious Disease AdvisorA Biologics License Application (BLA) has been submitted to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for Priorix (measles, mumps, and rubella virus vaccine, live) for active immunization against infection by measles, mumps...
- 18From:Indian Journal of Medical Microbiology (Vol. 35, Issue 1)Byline: Valsan. Verghese Dear Editor, In a country such as India, with its vast population and inequalities in access to appropriate healthcare and amenities such as safe water, universal availability of vaccines...
- 19From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 8, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Genevie M. Ntshoe 1 , * , Johanna M. McAnerney 2 , Brett N. Archer 3 , Sheilagh B. Smit 1 , Bernice N. Harris 4 , Stefano Tempia 5 , Mirriam Mashele 1 , Beverley Singh 6 , Juno Thomas 3 , Ayanda Cengimbo 3 ,...
- 20From:BMC Public Health (Vol. 19, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground International guidelines recommend that healthcare workers (HCWs) have presumptive evidence of immunity to rubella and that susceptible HCWs and doubt cases receive two doses of the MMR vaccine. However, a...