Abstract
Papers p 902 “No child should be denied immunisation without serious thought as to the consequences both for the individual and the community.” This powerful statement prefaces the chapter on contraindications in the new edition of the United Kingdom's Handbook on Immunisation against Infectious Disease .1 In the 1970s a barricade of contraindications to pertussis vaccine was erected in response to undue concerns about safety. As the evidence has been reassessed, this barricade has now been largely demolished. In 1981, without scientific substantiation, pertussis vaccine was contraindicated for a wide range of conditions, including cerebral irritation in the neonatal period and a family history of epilepsy or other diseases of the central nervous system.2 Interpretation of these recommendations was left to the …