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JOANNE FARYON: Hello, Iím Joanne Faryon.
Welcome to tonightís special, When Immunity
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Fails: The Whooping Cough Epidemic. Weíll
explore the worst whooping cough outbreak
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in California in more than 60 years. Just
why is a disease that was nearly extinct thirty
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years ago, finding its way back not just in
this state, but in other parts of the country
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as well? What we learned may surprise you.
There are serious questions about how well
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the vaccine to prevent the disease works;
questions government health officials have
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been slow to even ask. KPBS teamed up with
the Watchdog Institute, an investigative journalism
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center at San Diego State University, and
Radio Netherlands Worldwide to tell this story.
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A story that took us across California and
overseas to Amsterdam. But first, we begin
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in a delivery room in a San Diego hospital,
where a mother has just given birth to her
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third son.
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[ baby crying ]
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Matthew Jacob Bryce was born Oct 11, 2010.
A healthy baby boy, the third boy for Cindy
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and Marlon Bryce. Matthew started showing
signs of a cold when he was just two weeks
-
old. The Bryce family knew something was wrong.
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MARLON BRYCE: So it just seemed like this
cold it was just affecting his breathing.
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FARYON: The family was aware of the whooping
cough epidemic in California, from news reports
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REPORTER: State health officials say more
than 6,400 cases of whooping cough have been
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reported this year.
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FARYON: And their pediatrician.
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BRYCE: There wasnít any whooping or they
always say there is a whooping or a cough,
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he didnít have a cough or anything it was
just that there was a cold.
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FARYON: Matthewís doctor suspected it could
be whooping cough, also known as pertussis.
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She took a nasal swab and sent it to the lab.
She also started Matthew on antibiotics. Six
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days later, with Matthew just 23 days old,
Cindy Bryce got a phone call from the California
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Department of Health. The diagnosis was whooping
cough.
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M. BRYCE: The moment I heard it I just immediately
started thinking the worst because you have
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heard the news about the babies that have
passed away.
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FARYON: From January to October this year,
10 newborns in California died from whooping
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cough, two in San Diego County. More than
7,000 children and adults got sick from the
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disease - the highest number in the state
in more than 60 years. Just how did Matthew
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and so many others come down with a disease
that is supposed to be preventable with a
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vaccine? Tonight weíll raise questions about
the effectiveness of that vaccine. A four-month
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investigation by KPBS and the Watchdog Institute,
found many people who have been diagnosed
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with whooping cough were immunized. We also
show how government data on the number of
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people diagnosed with whooping cough lacks
timeliness and is often inconsistent, begging
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the question: just who is keeping track of
this epidemic?
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Weíll show you how some of the experts who
influence vaccine policy are financially tied
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to vaccine companies. And, weíll follow the
Bryce family as they struggle with their sonís
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diagnosis, and the setbacks in his recovery.
Whooping cough, violent cough, the hundred-day
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cough; all names for pertussis.
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DR. JAMES CHERRY: What causes the cough actually
we donít knowÖ thereís no other cough quite
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like it.
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FARYON: Pertussis is a respiratory illness
caused by the bacterium bordetella pertussis.
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At first, it can mimic a cold. But later produces
a violent and persistent cough, a cough that
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leaves children gasping for air ñ creating
the distinct whooping sound. For adults, whooping
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cough may only be a nuisance. In fact scientists
estimate more than 80 percent of adult cases
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are never diagnosed because most people assume
they just have a bad cold. But to infants
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whooping cough can be deadly, especially if
not diagnosed early.
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DR. JAMES CHERRY: So with infection that you
eventually clear the bacteria and you get
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better. But it's a prolonged, a good percentage
of cases will last one or two months.
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DR. FRITS MOOI: After a pertussis infection
it has been shown to get super infections,
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in fact that is one of the main complications,
pneumonia.
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FARYON: Young babies arenít able to cough
up secretions that collect in their lungs,
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leading to pneumonia and making it difficult
to breathe. Early antibiotic treatment is
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most critical in this age group. Whooping
cough was nearly wiped out by the late 1970ís
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because of mass immunization, but itís somehow
found its way back to California and other
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highly vaccinated communities around the world.
Just why itís made such a vengeful comeback
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has two of the worldís leading whooping cough
experts in disagreement.
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Dr. James Cherry of UCLA:
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CHERRY: The main reason is increased awareness.
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FARYON: and Dr. Frits Mooi of the Netherlands
Centre for Infectious Diseases Control.
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MOOI: We found really a new mutation in the
bug.
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FARYON: Dr. Mooi and Dr. Cherry both began
their research into Whooping Cough about 30
-
years ago. Cherry in the U.S. and Mooi in
The Netherlands. The two scientists know each
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other's work.
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CHERRY: First of all, his molecular microbiological
is, he's right at the top of scholars. There's
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no question about that. I think where some
of the things he's published is the clinical
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data are not very good.
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MOOI: I don't communicate too much with him
but what he wrote in the press is that I screw
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up epidemiology. That doesn't help me too
much.
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FARYON: To understand why these two experts
disagree, you need to know a little about
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the history of the pertussis vaccine.
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ANNOUNCER: Since most serious cases occur
before school age, immunization in school
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may be too late.
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FARYON: The bacteria that causes whooping
cough was first isolated in Belgium in 1906.
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At the time, the illness was one of the leading
causes of infant death.
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ANNOUNCER: In 1921, whooping cough killed
316 Michigan children. Last year, the number
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of deaths was reduced to 63.
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FARYON: The discovery lead to the first attempts
at a vaccine. But it wasnít until the late
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1940ís scientists developed a vaccine effective
enough to prevent whooping cough.
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ANNOUNCER: Unlike the disease however, a vaccine
does not endanger life.
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FARYON: By 1946, mass immunization programs
began in the U.S. and the number of cases
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dropped dramatically. Prior to the vaccine
the rate of disease was 157 cases per 100,000.
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By the 1970ís, with large scale immunizations,
fewer than one in one hundred thousand people
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got whooping cough. But the vaccine was not
without controversy. The early versions were
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associated with side effects such as prolonged
crying spells and seizures in babies. By 1996,
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the FDA approved a new whooping cough vaccine.
It was called an acellular version. That means
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the vaccine uses only purified components
of the disease-causing organism. That vaccine
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was considered to be safer and associated
with few mild side effects. Today, the U.S.
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uses only the acellular pertussis vaccine.
But as the United States was changing vaccines
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something else was happening ñ health officials
across the country were reporting increasing
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numbers of positive whooping cough cases.
And in a government lab about 30 minutes outside
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of Amsterdam, a group of scientists had discovered
something else ñ the bacterium that causes
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whooping cough started to look a little different.
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MOOI: This new mutation had the effect that
the bacteria started to produce more pertussis
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toxin.
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FARYON: Just whether that mutation is to blame,
at least in part, for the California epidemic
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and outbreaks elsewhere in the world is at
the heart of the whooping cough debate. Dr.
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Mooi believes this to be the case, but not
Dr. Cherry.
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CHERRY: Even though these changes have occurred
there is no evidence that thatís lead to
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increased vaccine failure.
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FARYON: Here in San Diego County, more than
85 percent of children are immunized. In fact,
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less than three percent of kids entering kindergarten
have not been immunized because of their familyís
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personal beliefs. But despite the high immunization
rate, San Diego has the second largest number
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of positive whooping cough cases in California.
Dr. Dean Sidelinger is San Diegoís deputy
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public health officer.
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DR. DEAN SIDELINGER: This is a disease that
if someone has it itís very easy to transfer
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from one person to another. So if you or I
sitting here during this interview, one of
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us had pertussis chances are we could transmit
that to the other person.
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Sidelinger says in the past, the number of
whooping cough cases peaked in summer and
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slowed by fall, but this year, that didnít
happen.
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SIDELINGER: So as time goes on weíre seeing
more cases. We know that public awareness
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plays into that as we talk about pertussis
more people are asking their doctors and doctors
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are asking their patients weíre going to
see more, but that trend continued.
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FARYON: By the end of November 2010, nearly
1000 infants, children and adults in San Diego
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County tested positive for whooping cough.
More than half of them had been immunized.
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Our investigation shows that trend continues
throughout California. KPBS and The Watchdog
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Institute collected data from 9 California
counties that report some of the highest infection
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rates. Our research shows that where immunization
history is known, between 44 and 83 percent
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of people diagnosed with whooping cough were
vaccinated. We looked at California Department
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of Public Health records too. In cases where
vaccination history was recorded, more than
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80 percent of infected people had been immunized.
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DR. MARK HORTON: From the epidemiology experts
and the experts in vaccine that this is absolutely
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expected.
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FARYON: Dr. Mark Horton is the director of
the California Department of Public Health.
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HORTON: If you've got a percentage of the
population vaccinated and a percentage of
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those vaccinated that are still susceptible
because the vaccine isn't perfectly effective
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or effective in all individuals, when you
work out the arithmetic you'll see that even
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with a very effective vaccine, and even if
you have the majority of the population vaccinated,
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the pool of susceptibles will include a number
of individuals that have never been vaccinated
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but will also include quite a few and in some
cases greater than 50 percent of the individuals
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have been previously vaccinated.
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FARYON: In other words, if you do the math,
you will always find a certain number of immunized
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people getting sick if a vaccine is not 100
percent effective.
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HORTON: So thatís no surprise to us nor is
it a reflection on the efficacy of the vaccine.
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REPORTER KEVIN CROWE: Itís not a reflection
on the efficacy of the vaccine?
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HORTON: Correct, correct.
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FARYON: But 20 years ago, the reverse was
true. According to a report by the Centers
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for Disease Control, more than half of the
children between 3 months and 4 years old
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who got whooping cough nationwide between
1990 and 1996 were not immunized. The rate
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of whooping cough has also been increasing
for the past 20 years. From less than one
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in 100,000 to 18 per 100,000 here in California.
And in some California counties such as San
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Luis Obispo, rates are nearly as high as before
vaccines were developed. Two days after our
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interview with the Bryce family, Matthew got
a fever. He was hospitalized at Radyís Childrenís
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Hospital in San Diego. Matthew was not immunized
against whooping cough. Heís too young. Babies
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canít be immunized until theyíre two months
old.
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But everyone else in the Bryce family was
vaccinated ñ even his parents got booster
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shots. The practice of immunizing everyone
around a newborn baby is called cocooning.
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CINDY BRYCE: When I called the doctor they
asked me who has it and I couldnít give them
-
an answer because I donít know where he got
it from because everyoneís been vaccinated.
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FARYON: Myron and one of his sons were also
tested for whooping cough ñ both were negative.
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M. BRYCE: The one thing I would want to know
is the vaccine working? Is it as effective
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because before this I thought the vaccine
was working and I thought that if I did everything
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that I was told to do that our sons would
be protected.
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FARYON: Just how effective is the vaccine?
That all depends on who you talk to. Drug
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information included with the two most commonly
used whooping cough vaccines in the US say
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the vaccine is 85 percent effective.
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MOOI: This new strain has completely invaded
the Netherlands and also other countries and
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pushed out all the other strains. Itís quite
unique.
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FARYON: Dr. Mooi believes thereís no way
to determine how effective the vaccines are
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because they have not been tested against
the new strain of whooping cough.
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MOOI: We call it the p3 strain.
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FARYON: A strain he believes is more virulent
and can make people sicker. This strain emerged
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while the new acellular vaccines were being
developed.
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MOOI: I can tell you one of the reasons the
vaccine companies is not too happy with me
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is because if what I say is true they selected
the wrong strains the in the 1980ís.
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FARYON: Mooiís lab was studying the new strain
when The Netherlands experienced an unexpected
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whooping cough epidemic in 1996.
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MOOI: There were more strains in fact when
you compare the two there was a very direct
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relationship between the emergence of these
strains, we call them p3 strains and the increase
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in pertussis notifications.
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CHERRY: Thereís absolutely no evidence that
either of the two vaccines that are most common
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today used in the U.S. that there is increased
vaccine failure with either of those vaccines.
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FARYON: So if you had to explain why weíre
seeing this epidemic the highest number of
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cases in 60 years, what would you tell people?
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CHERRY: The main reason is increased awareness.
People, particularly public health people
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are much more aware and that trickles down.
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FARYON: Cherry says the increase is also due
in part because of something called waning
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immunity. Immunity to whooping cough does
not last a lifetime, whether you are vaccinated
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or develop natural immunity from getting the
disease. Almost all experts agree waning immunity
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is contributing to whooping cough outbreaks
worldwide. Where they disagree: when does
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immunity fail? Dr. Mooi believes the new strain
of pertussis causes immunity to fail sooner
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than in the past. And heís published his
findings in several peer reviewed journals
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including the CDCís Infectious Diseases.
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MOOI: When the immunity is sub-optimal what
will happen the bacteria will not be recognized
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very well by the immune system because of
the mismatch and second of all even if immune
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response is started in the body the toxin
will be able to delay it. You could say these
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two changes work together by decreasing the
period of which the vaccine is protective
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further.
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FARYON: The Netherlands learned something
else after its 1996 epidemic. At the time,
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it had very few samples of the bacteria that
was causing people to get sick. So Mooiís
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lab began asking doctors and their labs to
send him positive pertussis swabs. His lab
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now has 3,000 samples. California that has
collected just 29 samples from the more than
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7,000 whooping cough cases in the state.
During the KPBS/Watchdog four month investigation,
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we also learned data kept by the state and
the CDC was often lagging behind county data
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and was inconsistent. While counties like
San Diego knew the immunization status of
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the vast majority of people with whooping
cough, the stateís data listed the information
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as unknown. Despite statewide protocols for
reporting pertussis, a KPBS/Watchdog survey
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found some counties donít follow them or
are slow to report the information
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HORTON: Thereís a perception that the more
numbers the better, but let me be very clear
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we in no way need reports on every single
case of pertussis for us to make important
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judgments and decisions about whatís happening.
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FARYON: The CDC in Atlanta declined our requests
for an interview. In an email response they
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said it is ìdifficult to disentangle all
the factorsî contributing to increases in
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pertussis, but listed ìincreasing transmission,
better recognition, and increased laboratory
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confirmation.î We also asked whether a new
more virulent strain could be contributing
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to the outbreak. The CDCís response: ìAvailable
data do not suggest that ptxP3 is more virulent,
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or that increasing reports are attributable
only to the emergence of ptxP3. We continue
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to work on this and other potential explanations
for the increase in pertussis that has occurred
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since the 1980s.î The CDC sent us this study
by their own investigators. The study looked
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at children between 6 months and five years
old. It found pertussis vaccines to be more
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than 90 percent effective. The study looked
at data between 1998 and 2001. It did not
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collect pertussis strain information.
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SINGING: Do you happen to know what a T-dap
is? It's a special vaccine but it's not just
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for kids.
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FARYON: Sanofi Pastuer, one of two companies
that make the vaccine widely used in the U.S.,
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sponsored this singing competition earlier
this year.
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SINGING: Persussis is the reason why you should
call your doctor today.
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FARYON:
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It was a public relations exercise to get
the word out about whooping cough and immunization.
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But just where is the line between good PR
and trying to influence public health policy?
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SINGING: Take a shot and give pertussis a
whooping.
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FARYON: Especially when public health policy
can increase vaccine sales. Since 2007, the
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California department of health has spent
more than $200 million on pertussis vaccines
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for children on medical or who are under-insured.
And itís sure to rise. In September, the
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California state legislature passed a law
requiring all students to receive another
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does, a sixth dose of the pertussis vaccine
before entering middle school. It may be a
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case of whatís good for business is also
good for public health. But how much influence
-
does industry have over public health policy?
Sanofi Pasteur also established and funds
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The Global Pertussis Initiative. A group made
up of medical experts from around the world.
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The GPI was established 10 years ago to study
why pertussis was making a comeback and find
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ways to control the disease. More than half
its members are employees of the pharmaceutical
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company or receive research money or consulting
fees. Public officials from across the country,
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including California and the CDC, site the
Global Pertussis Initiative when making vaccine
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policy. Dr. James Cherry is a member of the
initiative.
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Heís also received speaking fees and research
funds from vaccine manufacturers. At the same
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time, he sat on government committees to help
determine vaccine policy and efficacy.
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FARYON: A cynic might say that if you have
a community of experts in pertussis as in
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the Global Pertussis Initiative, who primarily
their work in terms of this endeavor is being
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funded by the drug company that makes the
vaccine, there might be less incentive to
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say make a new vaccine and more incentive
to say just use the old one more often. What
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do you say to them?
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CHERRY: I donít think thatís true. I think
that weíve been talking about new vaccines.
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It think the difficulty with the new vaccine
lies in the expense that it would cost to
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make a new vaccine and the difficulty in testing
it and FDA requirements for it and I think
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if the climate was right for two of the major
manufacturers they would do it.
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MOOI: And these are three different pertussis
strains.
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FARYON: Dr. Mooi is a critic of the Pertussis
Initiative.
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MOOI: My big disappointment is they have totally
and I think willfully ignored pathogen adaptation.
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I think a few years ago we had the year that
Darwin died 100 year ago, it was not so long
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ago, I think it's very strange that evolution
and pathogen adaptation is completely ignored
-
by such a group. I find that bad for science
and bad for public health.
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FARYON: Sanofi Pastuer released this statement
to KPBS and the Watchdog Institute. It says
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its grant to the GPI brings the world's authorities
on pertussis together and that benefits society
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as a whole. The company also says ìat the
present time, there is no evidence to suggest
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current pertussis vaccines lack effectiveness.î
Dr. Dean Sidelinger was one of the first health
-
officials to learn immunized people were getting
sick in his county. He said he was surprised,
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but in the end, he says the current vaccine
is still the best thing heís got to protect
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his community.
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SIDELINGER: It does significantly decrease
the pertussis we see a significantly lower
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number of pertussis cases now then we saw
before we started using the vaccine. So we
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donít want people to feel complacent to say
I donít want that vaccine because Iíve seen
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many of the cases that have been reported
were fully vaccinated.
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FARYON: Sidelinger says there would be many
more cases if there was no vaccine at all.
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Dr. Mooi agrees. He believes public health
officials should be encouraging cocooning,
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immunizing all those around newborn babies.
But in the long run, he says we need better
-
vaccines. Baby Matthew spent four days in
the hospital and was eventually discharged.
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Today, heís getting his two-month routine
check-up.
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DOCTOR: I think it was just back luck heís
had two illnesses in a row and now the cold
-
he's building up his immunity.
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FARYON: Despite a stuffy nose, Matthew is
doing well today.
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DCOTOR: As you might know the vaccine is not
as effective as we want it to be. And that's
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one reason why there've been a lot of cases.
But with Matthew in particular, his own immunity
-
has kicked in from having the illness, that
is, in effect a sort of a booster that will
-
protect him going forward. And how long that
immunity lasts is still a question.
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MARLON: The one thing I would want to say
to parents is just watch your kids,
just be concerned. Because at first we thought
-
we were being over protective. But Iím glad
we were just a little bit over-concerned.
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FARYON: Since KPBS and the Watchdog Institute
began its investigation, state health officials,
-
the CDC and scientists from UCLA, including
Dr. James Cherry, began a new study to determine
-
whether the new strain of pertussis is contributing
to the current whooping cough outbreak. For
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more on this story, and to see more of the
data collected in our investigation, go to
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kpbs.org/whoopingcough and watchdoginstitute.org.
For KPBS, the Watchdog Institute and Radio
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Netherlands Worldwide, Iím Joanne Faryon.
Thanks for watching.