Latest assessment of vaccine side effects

Vaccines can cause certain side effects but very rarely cause serious problems and are not associated with autism or type 1 diabetes, the American Institute of Medicine declared in a comprehensive survey of properties. Safety of vaccines lasts 17 years.

This article was revealed on Thursday not to make parents worried. Instead, the program will comply with the Program's requirements to compensate for problems caused by vaccines.

'Vaccines are very important tools to prevent infectious diseases that can be encountered throughout life, from childhood to adulthood. However, even though health care interventions are inevitable , ' Dr. Ellen Wright Clayton, Vanderbilt University, and pediatrician, biologist and team leader, surveyed.

Picture 1 of Latest assessment of vaccine side effects

The report emphasizes that vaccines are generally safe, but there is also evidence to show the following side effects:

- Fever causes seizures but rarely causes long-term consequences, due to rubella-mumps-rubella vaccine.

- Triple-vaccine also causes rare encephalitis in people with immune problems.

- The chickenpox vaccine sometimes also causes such infections, which also include chickenpox or soreness associated with nerve shingles. Sometimes it can cause hepatitis, pneumonia or meningitis.

- 6 types of vaccines (including triangle, chickenpox, hepatitis B, meningitis, tetanus) can cause severe allergic reactions called anaphylaxis.

- General vaccines can sometimes cause fainting or a type of shoulder inflammation.

Some other factors have not been proven such as anaphylaxis due to vaccination against HPV, vaccines and arthralgias in women and children who receive the triple vaccine.

This does not mean that there are no other side effects - judging that there is not enough evidence to determine more than 100 cases may be another side effect. Some vaccines are too new to relate with some really rare evidence.

'I hope that this result will help ease some people's anxiety , ' Clayton said.