Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1
32 ■ CHAPTER 02 Evaluating Scientific Claims

SCIENCE


The first trials are
performed on
animals or cell lines.

Three phases of
clinical trials are
conducted on adult
human volunteers.

If the vaccine proves to be safe
and effective, the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration (FDA)
approves it for commercial sale.

The Advisory
Committee on
Immunization
Practices (ACIP)
reviews all data on
the vaccine.

How safe is it?
How effective is it?
How common and
how serious is the
disease it protects
against?

The CDC director reviews the
ACIP recommendations before
adding the vaccine (or not) to the
recommended vaccine schedule.

Every facility that
manufactures the
vaccine is regularly
visited by the FDA.

A new vaccine is
extensively tested:

A vaccine undergoes
extensive review to be
added to the official list
of recommended
childhood
immunizations:

After approval, the
vaccine is continually
tested for safety:

Every batch of
vaccines is tested
for safety, purity,
and potency before
release.

Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting
System (VAERS): Anyone—including
parents, patients, and health care
professionals—may submit a report on
an adverse reaction to a vaccine.

Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD): Health
care organizations provide data on
vaccinations, and scientists conduct
studies to evaluate the vaccines’ safety.

1


2


3


Figure 2.10


Evaluating vaccines: an ongoing process


Vaccines are continually tested and evaluated for effectiveness, safety, and side effects. The severity of the disease a vaccine


works against, as well as how likely a child is to be infected with the disease, is also taken into consideration in determining


whether to recommend the vaccine.


Q1: Why do vaccine manufacturers begin with tests on animals or cell lines before moving on to adult human subjects?

Q2: What ongoing testing and reporting are vaccines subjected to?

Q3: What do ACIP, FDA, and CDC stand for, and what is the role of each in evaluating vaccines?

values, ethical stances, and religious beliefs
will make some choices more acceptable than
others. For example, if you believe it is not
ethical to eat meat, the scientific finding that
leaner meats are healthier than fattier meats
won’t matter to you.
It is also important to consider how your
choices will affect other people. Choosing not to
vaccinate a child, for instance, affects the entire
community. Rates of vaccination in the United
States have been hovering around 75 percent
because of misconceptions about the safety of
vaccines, and this low level of immunization
puts at risk not only the children who are not
vaccinated, but also those who cannot be vacci-
nated, such as infants too young for a vaccine

or people who are genetically unable to respond
to a vaccine. When a critical portion of a popu-
lation is vaccinated, then the spread of disease
is contained—a concept known as herd immu-
nity (Figure 2.11). In other words, vaccinating a
large number of people keeps germs out of circu-
lation and protects the vulnerable members of
the community.
When parents opt not to vaccinate their
children, herd immunity disappears. And
because of that loss of herd immunity, infec-
tious diseases of the past, some thought to be
eliminated, are roaring back. In August 2013,
a megachurch in Texas whose founder had
spoken out against vaccines made headlines
after 21 members of its congregation contracted
Free download pdf