Chicken Pox Vaccine Mitchell SD

I know controversies surround a number of childhood vaccines. In particular, why should I give my child the chicken pox vaccine if it is such a mild and normal childhood illness? My advice is not to vaccinate, but instead to expose your child to chicken pox if you can, since the disease itself confers lifelong immunity. The vaccine, on the other hand, does not. Once its protection declines (after about 10 years), your child would be susceptible to chicken pox as a young adult.

Christine Jean Arnold, MD
605-996-3380
1200 E 6th Ave
Mitchell, SD
Christianson Heather Faap
605-996-6366
1200 East 6th Avenue
Mitchell, SD
Graham ENT & Facial Plastic Surgery
605-996-8386
2100 North Kimball Street
Mitchell, SD
Dr. Christine Jean Arnold
605-996-3380
1200 E 6th Ave
Mitchell, SD
Christianson Heather MD
605-996-3380
1200 East 6th Avenue
Mitchell, SD
Dr. Heather P Christianson
1200 E 6th Ave
Mitchell, SD
Arnold Christine Faap
605-996-6367
1200 East 6th Avenue
Mitchell, SD
Dr. Jennifer Keisel Jenson
508-295-8622
1200 E 6th Ave
Mitchell, SD
Heather Page Christianson
(605) 996-6366
1200 E 6th Ave
Mitchell, SD
Jennifer Keisel Jenson, MD
1200 E 6th Ave
Mitchell, SD
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Ask the Doctor - Chicken Pox Vaccine

By Randall Neustaedter, OMD, Lac

I know controversies surround a number of childhood vaccines. In particular, why should I give my child the chicken pox vaccine if it is such a mild and normal childhood illness?


Good question, since the disease itself rarely results in complications. Prior to the introduction of the chicken pox (varicella) vaccine in 1995, deaths from chicken pox occurred in only 0.0014 percent of healthy children. My advice is not to vaccinate, but instead to expose your child to chicken pox if you can, since the disease itself confers lifelong immunity. The vaccine, on the other hand, does not. Once its protection declines (after about 10 years), your child would be susceptible to chicken pox as a young adult. At that age and into later adulthood, the disease tends to last much longer and come with more severe symptoms.

What concerns me even more is the fact that the vaccine is associated with a number of severe reactions. In fact, in the first five years of the vaccine’s use, the government-funded Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (www.vaers. hhs.gov) received 9,500 reports of adverse effects from the vaccine. These included several deaths and 193 reports of nervous system reactions including partial paralysis and seizures. Other reported reactions include arthritis and bleeding disorders.

In healthy children, chicken pox is a mild and self-limiting disease. Although the disease is uncomfortable for your child, I do not feel the potential benefit from the vaccine is worth the potential risks.

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