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costs of vaccination
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to Your State of Adding Vaccine RequirementsBy
Matthew M. Davis, M.D., MAPP
E-mail: mattdav@umich.edu Objectives: We examined recent public-sector trends in childhood vaccine costs and estimated future costs. Methods: We used public-sector price data to calculate vaccine purchase cost per child for children aged 0 to 6 years from 1975 to 2001. We fit a linear regression model to historical data and then used it to project costs per child from 2002 to 2020, adjusted to 2001 U.S. dollars. Results: Controlling for inflation, the cost of vaccine purchase per child climbed from $10 in 1975 to $385 in 2001. The cost of vaccine purchase in the year 2020 following recommendation of 7 additional vaccines is estimated to be $1,225 per child (95 percent confidence interval = $891, $1559). Conclusions: The cost per child for recommended vaccines at public-sector prices may triple over the next two decades. These projections have implications for vaccine financing at federal and state levels. American
Journal of Public Health December 2002;92(12):1982-7
Testimony by Jerri JohnsonJanuary 27, 2003 Childcare providers enforce immunization requirements, state licensers of childcare providers, and the public schools. This enforcement costs money for staff to do record keeping and follow-up. Much of this cost is borne by the state. A study in 1998 estimated that enforcing the immunization requirements cost the state at that time around $5 million per year. Will adding new vaccines to
the list increase costs to schools? It will, because many more follow-up
contacts will be needed for these particular vaccines.
Minneapolis Public Schools wrote to the Department of Health asking that no immunization requirements be added until funding is in place to enforce them. In addition to the state costs of enforcing vaccine requirements, these vaccines cost money in health care dollars. I have included a handout in your package with medical cost analyses of pneumococcal and chickenpox vaccines. Chickenpox and pneumococcal vaccine programs actually cost more money than they save from preventing disease. The pneumococcal vaccine, for example, costs around $60 per dose, or $240 per child for the four-dose series. The chickenpox vaccine also does not recover costs when looking at the cost of the vaccine compared to the cost of the disease. Only by factoring in indirect costs, such as lost wages for a parent to stay home with a child sick with chickenpox, is this vaccine deemed to be cost-effective. But these assessments of indirect costs did not include the cost of caring for vaccine-injured children. Hospitalization and medical costs for these children are extremely high. During school years, they require special education services, costs borne by the state. These children may later be cared for in group homes the rest of their lives, incurring huge costs to the state. Twelve percent of our children now have chronic disease of some sort, and many medical experts believe that the rapid increase in diseases such as autism, ADD, juvenile diabetes and asthma is partially attributable to the increase in required vaccines. A parent who stays home for five days when her child has chickenpox may use vacation days or may lose some income. But parents of children disabled by vaccines often must quit work permanently to stay home with their child, losing years of income, and the vaccine-injured child may never grow up to earn a productive income. But ultimately, the question before us is not about dollars and cents. When we are preventing communicable disease, and when we are preventing vaccine injuries, the real issue is the value in human life that can't be quantified. You can't put a price on the joy of having a healthy baby, and you can't quantify the grief of a parent who loses a baby, no matter what the cause. And so the Minnesota Natural Health Coalition is calling for the following: 1. Safer vaccines. Pharmaceutical companies need to be held accountable to produce vaccines that have fewer serious side effects.
The devastation that vaccines have caused in many cases is tragic beyond belief. To add insult to injury we are forced to pay for them through our taxes and thus further subsidize the drug companies. It is bad enough that Medicare surrenders $100 billion a year to the drug companies. Soon we will be adding another $10 billion through the vaccine program. That just doesn’t seem right or fair to me. To find out more about the vaccine issue, including how to protect your children, consider “The Danger of Vaccines, and How You Can Legally Avoid Them” audiotape. In August 2002, I hosted a timely and important teleconference featuring nationally renowned vaccine expert, Dr. Sherri Tenpenny, to discuss the real dangers of vaccines and how you can legally avoid them. This professionally recorded 90-minute cassette presents that full conference, and many listeners have called it the most comprehensive overview of the topic to date. It will help you:
Learn what approaches you can take to immunize your child against disease safely--and for life |