+1 I guess as long as your kids don't leave the house, play with other children or engage in sports, or play in public places then the shot is not necessary. |
I would get a new pediatrician. Wow. |
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With vaccines we have stopped/halted/minimized the spread of hep a and b amongst children. http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/94/6/1023 |
| We got the first shot in the hospital. Seriously, no one suggested any good reasons to wait. |
I guess your pediatrician knows more about this than the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the American Academy of Family Physicians? I, personally, would find a new pediatrician. |
I'm one of those posters. It's just not a very common disease in this country, and the addition of the vaccine to the schedule is relatively recent. According to the CDC, since it's been introduced on the schedule, rates have declined significantly, which is a great public health win. Public health, like everything else, is political (see, for example, the debate about gardasil) and choices for emphasis have to be made. I simply question whether focus on this disease, which is most commonly, though I agree not exclusively, transmitted via sex and blood contact is the right public health choice. My kids were vaccinated in accordance with the schedule, so it's really a political/social point and it's certainly not an anti-vax point. |
+1 We waited until my kid was 1 month old before we started the Hep-B vaccinations. Pretty sure he wasn't going to be bit on the playground before that. He was up-to-date before starting preschool at 3yo. |
| while we were still at the hospital, within the first 24 hours after he was born |
Ditto. Having all the records in one place (plus the near zero risk of contracting the disease in the first month) was the reason that I declined at the hospital. |
It is also transmitted through blood transfusions, which is why we gave it at birth -- just in the rare case the baby needed one. |
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People it take THREE shots to confer full immunity with hep B (hep A is only a one shot deal). So those that wait add 6 months to the time for immunity. So if your kid was not in a daycare type setting for 6 months - good for you. But since fecal matter is highly contagious way of spreading the heps -- and if you swab a kid you will find it on them - it is best to start the series earlier rather than later. |
Yeah, that's why it's rampant among people in our age range, who were born before it was required. Get a life. |
Doth protest too much "very pro-vax." |
Neither is polio. Why? BECAUSE OF THE POLIO VACCINES!!!!!!!!! (Capital letters for shouting.) |
| Last year there were ten thousand times as many cases of Hep B as measles in the US |