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How We Know that Vaccines Are Safe

We are not starting from scratch when wondering if vaccines are safe or not.

鈥淪enator, I support vaccines. I support the childhood schedule. The only thing I want is good science, and that鈥檚 it.鈥 These words were spoken by Robert F. Kennedy Jr during his confirmation hearing for Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary, addressed at Senator Elizabeth Warren who was听.

The claim buried in this statement and in RFK Jr鈥檚 decades-long crusade against immunization鈥攖hat there is no 鈥済ood science鈥 on vaccine safety鈥攊s bound to dominate public health discourse in the coming years, as Trump鈥檚 new administration has shown itself hostile to science and data. I heard it in person recently when someone who was clearly ill-informed told me we simply didn鈥檛 know how safe all these vaccines were.

As scientific knowledge gets stripped down by lies and public trust in life-saving technologies falls, it will be important to go back to basics and remind our neighbours how we know what we know. Vaccines are very safe and we know this because of a mountain of studies that have approached this question from multiple angles.

First off, vaccines do not arrive on the market with zero safety data. Following testing in animals, a new vaccine is听听in a small group of people (20 to 100), followed by another clinical trial in 100 to 300 people, followed by the largest trial in 1,000 to 3,000 people. These numbers are just guidelines: when Pfizer tested their COVID-19 vaccine, it was in听over 36,000 people. In the U.S., the Food and Drug Administration inspects the place where the vaccine will be manufactured, and vaccine lots are themselves tested for consistency. All of this information is considered by the committee deciding if the vaccine should be approved, and an approved vaccine must then be recommended, a decision made by yet another group.

This testing and evaluating, solid though it may be, is just the beginning.

CAEFISS and VAERS

Post-market surveillance means that even though a vaccine (or a drug) has been approved and is being used, we continue to study it. Clinical trials can only recruit so many participants, which means they will not pick up on rare side effects. That is where post-market surveillance comes in.

In Canada, the听听(CAEFISS) regularly publishes analyses of what happened after Canadians received a vaccine. This information comes from Canadians and their physicians choosing to fill out reports if something does happen, but CAEFISS also adds data from 12 paediatric hospitals that actively screen their admissions for such issues. We can look at听听scrutinizing the years 2018 and 2019, for example, and see that adverse events鈥攎eaning something bad that happened, which can include anything from a mild symptom like pain at the site of injection to death鈥攚ere quite uncommon following vaccination: just under 11 such events for every 100,000 vaccine doses. Over 90% of these were not serious in nature; those that were serious were usually a seizure or a severe allergic reaction known as anaphylaxis. Nothing unexpected was seen during those years, nor was there any increase in their reporting compared to previous years.

In the U.S., monitoring is typically done using the听听(VAERS), but just like with CAEFISS,听we can鈥檛 simply scroll through the reports to sound the alarm.听I cannot emphasize this enough. Adverse events being reported could simply be coincidences; they need to be compared to how common they normally are, and experts need to look for unusual symptoms which could indicate something new. Anti-vaccine activists are quick to extract scary-looking reports from the database in a move I have called听the VAERS scare tactic. The last time I checked, one report from a man who had just received a COVID-19 vaccine stated that his 鈥減enis swelled to ten times its size.鈥 Using this report to claim that this vaccine will assuredly lead to either the greatest night of your life or to priapism would be grossly misleading.

There is so much data from post-market surveillance that听听was published by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, one of the twelve agencies under HHS, on the safety of routine vaccination in the United States. Having looked at 189 such studies, the agency concluded there was no new evidence since their 2014 report of any increase in important adverse events following routine vaccination.

Scientists have not simply looked at the safety of all vaccines put together; they have also monitored the safety of individual vaccines, including those that have generated a lot of anxiety on the part of parents (often due to negative campaigns by anti-vaccine groups). Many people had qualms about the COVID-19 vaccines鈥攅specially those using mRNA to trigger an immune reaction鈥攚hen they were rolled out, but听听looking at the safety of the various COVID-19 vaccines within clinical trials concluded that there was 鈥減robably little or no difference between most vaccines and placebo for serious adverse events,鈥 having looked at a total of 41 trials of 12 different COVID vaccines. Trials can鈥檛 pick up on extremely uncommon complications: sure enough, it was the data collected through post-market surveillance that allowed public health scientists to quickly spot a very rare but important complication of both the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine and the one made by Johnson & Johnson: blood clots. To say the COVID vaccines were not studied for safety would either be foolishly ignorant or a bald-faced lie.

Perhaps equally as controversial in the public eye, for a long while at least, was the MMR vaccine, an injection that included parts of the measles, mumps, and rubella viruses. The听cause c茅l猫bre听was entirely manufactured: Andrew Wakefield, later stripped of his medical license, committed fraud by secretly accepting money from a lawyer who wanted to sue vaccine manufacturers and by faking data. His study was published in听The Lancet听in 1998 and finally听. The public鈥檚 concern over a possible association between the MMR vaccine and autism was not simply cast aside by dismissive doctors; it was听迟丑辞谤辞耻驳丑濒测听studied.

Six years after the publication of Wakefield鈥檚 corrupt study, the Institute of Medicine released听听on the body of evidence investigating a link between autism and vaccines, particularly those containing a mercury derivative named thimerosal. In the Institute鈥檚 Vulcan-like scientific wording, it favoured 鈥渞ejection of a causal relationship鈥 between the MMR vaccine or any thimerosal-containing vaccine and autism, pointing out that the mechanisms by which thimerosal could cause autism were 鈥渢heoretical only.鈥 Basically, no good evidence to support the claim that these vaccines cause autism.

Denmark looked at over half a million children who had, in the 1990s, either received the MMR vaccine or not, finding听. Our own city of Montreal was scrutinized, with a team from 9I制作厂免费 looking at over 27,000 children who attended English schools to look for a link:听. Meanwhile, Japan became the focus of an interesting听de facto听experiment. Due to听听over a number of reports of meningitis following the MMR vaccine, their MMR vaccination program was terminated in April 1993. Looking at the Japanese city of Yokohama, a team of scientists clearly saw that after MMR vaccination stopped, cases of autism听听(because, as we now know, of increased awareness and changes in the diagnostic criteria). It鈥檚 hard to argue that the MMR vaccine is what causes autism when yearly cases听increase听after you stop using the vaccine. This is by no means a complete picture of all the studies that were done trying to find a link between thimerosal and autism and confirming that there was none, but it should be enough to show that multiple investigations were carried out.

The reason why thimerosal was present in some vaccines was because these vaccine bottles contain multiple doses. As sterile needles go in and out of these vials, there is a small risk that the content will become contaminated with bacteria or fungi that would then get injected into someone. Thimerosal acted as a preservative but it was completely removed from nearly all vaccines delivered in the U.S. in听听out of an abundance of precaution. (Only听蝉辞尘别听flu vaccines still contain thimerosal in the听听and in听.)

Vaccine ingredients, like thimerosal but also formaldehyde and aluminum, have often been accused of causing harm, but understanding dosing is key. Formaldehyde may be commonly used as embalming fluid, but our bodies need some formaldehyde to make听听(via a molecule derived from formaldehyde called听). It鈥檚 the dose that makes the poison. In their first two years of life, an infant could be exposed to听听of formaldehyde from vaccines. Meanwhile, a single apple contains in the neighbourhood of 1 to 5 mg of the substance (based on听听sources). As for aluminum, it is one of the most common elements on earth, and the amount present in vaccines is overshadowed by听鈥攊ncluding baby formula.

Common arguments

Even if someone accepts this stack of safety data and scientific knowledge, they could still argue the following: what if a vaccine causes problems 50 years down the road? How can we protect ourselves from this risk when clinical trials don鈥檛 run for decades? The short answer is that, despite claims to the contrary fomented by the anti-vaccine movement, we are not aware of vaccines suddenly causing damage decades after they have been injected. Moreover, allowing 2.6 million children to die every year鈥攚hich is an estimate of how many听听pre-vaccine鈥攚hile we observe clinical trial participants for 50 years just in case something bad happens would be, I hope you can see, ethically precarious. We do not have the latitude to wait forever while significant percentages of our population are maimed and killed by infections.

Some will argue that vaccines have never been compared to placebos. As a blanket statement, it is categorically false. As I have听written previously, plenty of vaccines were pitted against placebos (including injections of saline); but in some cases, the use of a placebo would mean creating an arguably unethical situation. If you wanted to test a new measles vaccine, the people in your placebo group would be prohibited from receiving the preexisting measles vaccine that the rest of the population is getting, thus putting them at increased risk for contracting the disease. Placebos are good but ethical considerations shouldn鈥檛 be ignored.

What about the argument that everyone involved in testing vaccines for safety is paid by the pharmaceutical industry and it is thus in their interest to hide evidence of harm? Conflicts of interest do exist, and there is a well-known and often-denounced revolving door between industry and regulation. But to claim that听every scientist听involved in vaccine research is corrupt? That millions of researchers, including those merely analyzing data from the past and comparing rates of autism between vaccinated and unvaccinated groups, are actively concealing dangers? We鈥檙e now in the realm of the grand conspiracy theory, for which there is no evidence. Vaccine researchers have families and children, too, and some even went into the field after witnessing the harms of vaccine-preventable diseases. To portray them as money-hungry automata doing the bidding of some shadowy cabal is simply irrational.

This being said, vaccines are not 100% safe. They often cause minor and temporary problems, like fatigue and fevers, and in rare cases they cause more serious damage. But we did not develop vaccines to serve as a fun Russian roulette; they exist to prevent widespread and debilitating harm. Measles, which is airborne and extremely contagious, causes swelling of the brain in听, and it can wipe your immunological memory for years, making you susceptible to infections you were previously protected from. Rubella causes birth defects. Polio can lead to permanent paralysis and the need for a portable ventilator to breathe. Risks are not only present with a medical intervention; they also exist in the diseases they are there to prevent.

I鈥檝e recently referred to the contention that we don鈥檛 have any studies on something that has been thoroughly studied as听the square one fallacy. It can be wielded by liars and easily adopted by an audience that does not know how much we already know. When it comes to vaccine safety, we are not starting from square one.

Moving forward, though, the American side of this system of knowledge is already being decimated by Elon Musk鈥檚 hirelings and by anti-vaxxer Robert F. Kennedy Jr. As was recently pointed out by virologist Angela Rasmussen on听, vaccine development and oversight require agencies like the NIH and FDA, and masses of employees at these entities have been carelessly fired in the last weeks.

If you wanted evidence that vaccines are unsafe, firing the people responsible for their safety would certainly create the very reality you spent decades imagining.听

Take-home message:
- Some people claim that the safety of vaccines has never been adequately studied, which is false
- Vaccine safety is studied in a series of larger and larger clinical trials before they can be approved, and surveillance continues after a vaccine is used to monitor for rare side effects
- The alleged link between autism and vaccines (especially with the vaccine ingredient thimerosal) has been thoroughly investigated and it does not exist


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