Vaccine Safety > Issues of Interest > Multiple Vaccines
Institute of Medicine
(IOM) Report
Immunization Safety Review: Multiple Immunizations & Immune Dysfunction
Released February 20, 2002
Contents of this page:
Related links/pages:
Overview of the IOM Report
Background
In 2000, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the
National Institutes of Health (NIH) asked the Institute of Medicine (IOM) to
establish an independent expert committee to review hypotheses about existing
immunization safety concerns. The first report on Measles, Mumps, Rubella (MMR) vaccine and autism was
released in April 2001 and the second report on thimerosal-containing vaccines
and neurodevelopmental disorders was released in October 2001.
On February 20 2002, the IOM released its third report which addressed multiple immunizations and immune dysfunction.
Although most people realize the benefits of vaccinations, a recent survey showed that
approximately one-quarter of parents believe that infants get more vaccines
than are good for them, and that too many immunizations could overwhelm an
infant’s immune system. CDC and NIH welcome this report, which is a helpful contribution
towards a better understanding of this issue. CDC and NIH are most grateful to the individual scientists on the IOM
Committee and IOM staff members for their dedicated and valuable service to the continued integrity of our national immunization system.
Conclusions
The IOM Immunization Safety
Review Committee’s most important conclusions were
- A
review of the available scientific evidence does not support the hypothesis
that the infant immune system is inherently incapable of handling the number
of antigens that children are exposed to during routine immunizations,
- The epidemiologic evidence (i.e., from studies of vaccine-exposed populations
and their control groups) favors rejection of a causal relationship between
multiple immunizations and increased risk for infections or for type 1
diabetes mellitus,
- The epidemiologic evidence regarding increased risk for allergic disease,
particularly asthma, was inadequate to accept or reject a causal
relationship.
Recommendations
The Committee recommends limited but
continued public health attention to this issue in the form of policy analysis,
research and communication strategy development. However, the Committee does not recommend a review by national and
federal vaccine-related advisory groups of the licensure or schedule of
administration of vaccines on the basis of concerns about immune dysfunction.
Next
Steps
The Committee has made helpful
recommendations about policy, research and communication issues which are
important to resolve outstanding issues related to the hypothesis that multiple
vaccinations increase the risk for immune dysfunction. These recommendations will be considered in depth by Public Health
Service agencies over the next several months.
Links to
actual IOM report
The IOM report and the news
release are available on the Web at
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