Immunization
- 17 July 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 246 (3) , 236-241
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1981.03320030028022
Abstract
Acute respiratory and diarrheal diseases cannot be expected to be effectively controlled by vaccines for a variety of reasons but largely because of the great multiplicity of causative agents. Measles could be eradicated by appropriate strategies. Paralytic poliomyelitis caused by polioviruses can be controlled by oral poliovirus vaccine in both developed and undeveloped countries but by different strategies. Vaccines cannot be expected to have a beneficial effect on recurrent genital, ocular, and facial herpes. Since naturally acquired immunity does not prevent subsequent fetal intrauterine infection with cytomegalovirus, it is still necessary to establish whether it can nevertheless prevent congenital defects. Prospective heptitis B vaccines cannot be expected to be useful in the general population. There is reason to believe that both varicella and herpes zoster could be prevented by widespread use of the Japanese attenuated vaccine. (JAMA1981;246:236-241)Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Selective primary health care: An interim strategy for disease control in developing countriesSocial Science & Medicine. Part C: Medical Economics, 1980
- Cytomegalovirus Immunization: Status, Prospects, and ProblemsClinical Infectious Diseases, 1980
- Different Protection Rates in Various Groups of Volunteers Given Subunit Influenza Virus Vaccine in 1976The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1979
- Prevention of Pneumococcal Infection by Immunization with Capsular Polysaccharides of Streptococcus pneumoniae: Current Status of Polyvalent VaccinesThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1977
- Misery of Recurrent Herpes: What to Do?New England Journal of Medicine, 1975
- Infections with Cytomegalovirus in Bone Marrow Transplantation: Report of a WorkshopThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1975