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New illness surfaces as vaccine succeeds NATIVES: Village children suffer
Saturday, April 28, 2007 (18:29:28)
Posted by Cougar
New illness surfaces as vaccine succeeds NATIVES: Village children suffer
the most from new bacteria strains.
By ROSEMARY SHINOHARA Anchorage Daily News (Published: April 27, 2007)
http://www.adn.com/news/alaska/rural/story/8831036p-8731689c.html
A vaccine given since 2001 has nearly wiped out seven of the worst strains
of pneumococcal disease among Alaska children. But different strains not
covered by the vaccine are on the rise among Native children, says a report
published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The bacteria cause pneumonia, blood infection, meningitis and other
diseases.
Non-Native Alaska children are not getting the new diseases at increased
rates, said Dr. Rosalind Singleton, a pediatrician with the Alaska Native
Tribal Consortium and a researcher for the federal Centers for Disease
Control in Anchorage. She and colleagues wrote the journal report.
The researchers don't know where the newly blossoming strains came from, and
can only speculate as to why they are surfacing at increased rates just in
Native children. One possibility is that the new strains may be more easily
transmitted in small village houses than in urban housing, said Singleton.
And for children in villages without plumbing, hand-washing could be more
difficult, she noted.
Alaska Native children are still better off than before, with about a 40
percent decrease in pneumococcal disease, said Singleton.
The bacteria cause serious illnesses, particularly among children and
elders, said Singleton. If it invades the lungs, a child may get pneumonia.
In the bloodstream, the disease is called bacteremia. In the covering of the
brain, the bacteria cause meningitis. The bacteria can also cause middle ear
and sinus infections.
The seven-strain vaccine, PCV7, resulted in a 96 percent decrease in these
invasive pneumococcal diseases among Alaska children since 2004, the
researchers' study showed. But strains not covered by the vaccine increased
140 percent in Native children compared with rates before the vaccine was
used.
In the Bethel region, this meant more children coming in with bacteria in
the blood stream last year, said Dr. Mehran Mosley of the Yukon-Kuskokwim
Health Corp. "Suddenly a large number of children were coming in with
bacteremia which I hadn't seen before," he said.
"The bugs that have emerged as the new culprits are all sensitive to simple
therapies," Mosley said. "We haven't found anything terrible that we haven't
been able to treat." But unexpected numbers of children are still getting
sick from the new diseases.
A child with bacteremia may have a fever and act lethargic and less playful,
Mosely said.
Singleton said researchers around the world have been looking into whether
different strains will move in to take the place of those knocked down by
the seven-strain vaccine, but Alaska is one of the first places to
demonstrate that it is actually happening.
The PCV7 vaccine tackled strains that caused three-fourths of so-called
invasive infections.
New vaccines are under development that might take care of emerging strains,
she said. One is projected to be licensed in 2010, but that's not certain.
Pneumococcal disease rates are high in infants and children under 2, low for
older children and young adults. The rates climb among older adults,
Singleton said.
Daily News reporter Rosemary Shinohara can be reached at rshinohara@adn.com
or 257-4340. |