by Dick Hall-Sizemore

At his press conference last week, President Trump railed at length against giving young children multiple vaccinations at once.ย In his view, doctors were pumping all this stuff into those โbeautiful bodies.โย At times, he alluded to 80 vaccines, as if children were being given every vaccine available.ย At other times, he clearly was talking about the standard MMR (mumps, measles, and rubella) vaccination shot.ย He urged parents to separate those vaccination shots.ย โTake them [the children] in three, four, five times,โ he advised.
He offered no medical or other scientific basis for this recommendation. โThis is based on what I feel. The mumps, measles and โ the three should be taken separately. And it seems to be that when you mix them, there could be a problem. So, thereโs no downside in taking them separately. In fact, they think itโs better. So let it be separate.โ
There is a major obstacle to being able to follow that advice.ย The three vaccines are not manufactured separately.ย For each of these diseases, the Centers for Disease Control says, โSingle-antigen vaccine is not available.โย
https://www.cdc.gov/rubella/hcp/vaccine-considerations/index.html
https://www.cdc.gov/mumps/hcp/vaccine-considerations/index.html
My daughter is a pediatrician in Northern Virginia.ย She told me that she occasionally has had parents ask about getting the MMR vaccination in separate shots.ย When told that separate doses are not available, they drop the issue.ย Now, I can imagine her and other pediatricians throughout the state being confronted by angry mothers demanding separate shots and not believing that such doses are not available. After all, President Trump told them that was the best way.
Pediatricians may be affected by this crusade against vaccinations in another way. My daughter recently had a mother of a four-month old ask when was the earliest that her baby could be vaccinated. (Doctors recommend that children get their first MMR vaccination when they are 12-15 months old.) She wanted to get her child vaccinated as soon as possible because she was worried that the vaccines soon might not be available.
The President is spreading misinformation and fear among parents over an issue of which he is ignorant.


















