Right now, many people are hoping for a vaccine to protect against the new coronavirus. While that’s still on the horizon, new research suggests that families who do vaccinate their children may not be following the recommended schedule.

Vaccines are given on a schedule for a reason: to protect children from vaccine-preventable disease. Experts designed the schedule so that children get protection when they need it — and the doses are timed so the vaccine itself can have the best effect. When parents don’t follow the schedule, their children may not be protected.

And yet, many parents do not follow the schedule.

A third of families change vaccine schedule

In a study recently published in the journal Pediatrics, researchers looked at data from the National Immunization Survey from 2014 and found that only 63% of families followed the recommended vaccination schedule for their children. The majority of those who didn’t followed an alternate schedule, spacing vaccines out, skipping some, or doing a combination of both.

The study did not include the influenza vaccine, one that many parents choose not to give. The vaccines in this study were routine vaccines, given to all children and required for many schools and daycare programs.

Not surprisingly, children whose parents used an alternate vaccine schedule were four times as likely to be behind in their immunizations or missing vaccines entirely. This can be very dangerous.

In the first two years of life, vaccines protect babies and toddlers against:

  • pneumococcus and Haemophilus Influenzae, bacteria that can cause serious infections
  • pertussis (whooping cough), which can be fatal in infants
  • polio, which can cause a paralysis that can be fatal
  • diphtheria, a serious respiratory illness
  • rotavirus, a diarrhea that can lead to serious dehydration in young infants
  • measles, which can cause pneumonia and neurological problems
  • mumps, which causes swollen glands in the neck and can sometimes lead to complications
  • rubella, or German measles. If women catch it during pregnancy, it can lead to miscarriage or birth defects.
  • varicella (chicken pox). While most infections are mild, the rash caused by chicken pox can get infected and the virus itself can affect the lungs or brain.
  • hepatitis B and hepatitis A, both infections of the liver. Hepatitis B infections can be chronic and lead to liver damage.

Having vaccines on schedule protects babies and children vulnerable to disease

Parents sometimes worry about giving several vaccines at once, somet

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