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      Vaccine refusal and the endgame: walking the last mile first.

      Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
      methods, History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Measles, Humans, Disease Eradication, epidemiology, history, Smallpox, Poliomyelitis, Incidence, Mass Vaccination, Treatment Refusal

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          Abstract

          As multiple papers within this special issue illustrate, the dynamics of disease eradication are different from disease control. When it comes to disease eradication, 'the last mile is longest'. For social and ecological reasons such as vaccine refusal, further ending incidence of a disease when it has reached low levels is frequently complex. Issues of non-compliance within a target population often influence the outcome of disease eradication efforts. Past eradication efforts confronted such obstacles towards the tail end of the campaign, when disease incidence was lowest. This article provides a comparison of non-compliance within polio, measles and smallpox campaigns, demonstrating the tendency of vaccine refusal to rise as disease incidence falls. In order to overcome one of the most intractable challenges to eradication, future disease eradication efforts must prioritize vaccine refusal from the start, i.e. 'walk the last mile first'.

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          Most cited references29

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          Wakefield's article linking MMR vaccine and autism was fraudulent

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            Anxiety, advice, and the ability to discern: feeling anxious motivates individuals to seek and use advice.

            Across 8 experiments, the influence of anxiety on advice seeking and advice taking is described. Anxious individuals are found to be more likely to seek and rely on advice than are those in a neutral emotional state (Experiment 1), but this pattern of results does not generalize to other negatively valenced emotions (Experiment 2). The relationships between anxiety and advice seeking and anxiety and advice taking are mediated by self-confidence; anxiety lowers self-confidence, which increases advice seeking and reliance upon advice (Experiment 3). Although anxiety also impairs information processing, impaired information processing does not mediate the relationship between anxiety and advice taking (Experiment 4). Finally, anxious individuals are found to fail to discriminate between good and bad advice (Experiments 5a-5c), and between advice from advisors with and without a conflict of interest (Experiment 6).
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              The Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS).

              (1994)
              Immunizations against most vaccine-preventable diseases will be needed indefinitely unless the disease is eradicated. Public acceptance of immunizations may be threatened as vaccine coverage increases and disease decreases, however, due to the increase in both causally and coincidentally related vaccine adverse events. The post-marketing surveillance for such events in the USA in response to the mandatory reporting requirements of the National Childhood Injury Act of 1986. While VAERS has many methodological limitations intrinsic to such systems, it can play an important role in helping to monitor vaccine safety and maintain public confidence in immunizations.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                10.1098/rstb.2012.0148
                3720046
                23798696

                Chemistry
                methods,History, 20th Century,History, 21st Century,Measles,Humans,Disease Eradication,epidemiology,history,Smallpox,Poliomyelitis,Incidence,Mass Vaccination,Treatment Refusal

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