Six Childhood Scourges We’ve Forgotten About, Thanks to Vaccines
"Most Americans, including doctors, have no memory of the devastating diseases that routinely threatened children until the 1960s.
Some of President-elect Donald J. Trump’s picks for the government’s top health posts have expressed skepticism about the safety of childhood vaccines. It’s a sentiment shared by a growing number of parents, who are choosing to skip recommended shots for their children.
But while everyone seems to be talking about the potential side effects of vaccines, few are discussing the diseases they prevent.
It has been half a century or more since many of the inoculations became routine in the United States, and the experience of having these illnesses has been largely erased from public memory. Questions today about the risk-benefit ratio of vaccines might just be a product of the vaccines’ own success.
Here is what people should know about six once-common illnesses that vaccines have contained for decades.
Measles
Measles, a viral infection often spread by a cough or sneeze, is extraordinarily contagious: Nine out of 10 people around an infected person will catch measles if they have not been vaccinated. Measles can be contracted in a room up to two hours after a person with the disease has left it.
Measles is not a mild illness, particularly for children under 5. It can cause a high fever, coughing, conjunctivitis and rashes, and if it leads to pneumonia or encephalitis — brain swelling — it can quickly become lethal. Before the vaccine was licensed in the United States in 1963, almost every child had contracted measles by age 15. Tens of thousands of measles patients were hospitalized each year, and between 400 and 500 of them died.
Two doses of the MMR vaccine together are about 97 percent effective at preventing measles. But epidemiologists say a 95 percent vaccine coverage rate is necessary to prevent transmission of the virus in a community. Over the past four school years, the kindergarten vaccination rate has fallen below that threshold — in some communities, far below.
About 280,000 kindergarten students in the United States are now unprotected, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and measles — which was eliminated from the United States in 2000 — has since seen a resurgence. There have been 16 measles outbreaks in 2024, compared with four outbreaks in 2023. In communities where the spread is rampant, even a vaccinated child can occasionally contract the disease, though their symptoms are generally less severe.
Diphtheria
The Greek word diphthera means leather — a fitting reference for a bacterial infection that creates a thick, gray membrane over the throat and tonsils, suffocating its victims. There was a time in the United States when up to eight children in a single family suffered that fate — a burden so grave that a science historian called it “childhood’s deadly scourge.”
The toxin driving the disease is produced by a strain of bacteria in respiratory droplets and works by killing healthy tissues, which can lead to difficulty breathing and swallowing, especially among young children with smaller airways. It can also gravely damage the cardiac and nervous systems, resulting in heart failure or paralysis.
Even with treatment, one in 10 people who have respiratory diphtheria die from it, according to the C.D.C.
The infection is now preventable in young children through multiple DTaP vaccine doses, and preteens and adults get boosters called Tdap. Thanks to vaccinations, cases in the United States have gone from more than 100,000 per year in the 1920s to — on average — less than one.
Tetanus
A fully developed tetanus infection can be an alarming sight: fists clenched, back arched, legs rigid from extreme, excruciating muscle spasms that last several minutes. Extreme fluctuations in blood pressure. A racing heart. Neck and stomach muscles tight enough to impair breathing.
Treatment for tetanus must be immediate, and up to 20 percent of people who become infected will die.
It all starts with a bacteria that lies dormant in soil and animal feces until it enters the body through broken skin like a cut. The microbe begins to grow, divide and release a toxin that impairs nerves.
Vaccines containing the tetanus toxoid began being administered to children in the U.S. in the 1940s, when there were more than 500 cases per year. Children are now protected through multiple doses of the dTap vaccine, which also guards against diphtheria and pertussis (also known as whooping cough). Since 2000, the annual number of cases has been below 50.
Mumps
The mumps virus, spread through saliva and respiratory droplets triggers a fever and swollen salivary glands in the ears — which is why patients often have a puffy jaw and cheeks — and can, in severe cases, cause deafness.
The disease is dangerously insidious: It can lie dormant for up to a month before symptoms appear, and most people are infectious before their salivary glands begin to swell. Complications are more common in adults than children, but they can include inflammation in the ovaries and testicles — which can cause infertility or sterility — or in the brain and spinal cord, which can put patients at risk of seizures and strokes.
The United States began vaccinating against mumps in 1967 and subsequently saw a 99 percent decrease in cases. But annual cases in the United States — which previously hovered between 200 and 400 — have surpassed 1,000 nine times since 2006. On three occasions, they surpassed 6,000.
Rubella
The first sign of rubella is often a rash on the face, and while the infection often remains mild in children, it can prove devastating for pregnant women whom the children infect.
When passed on to a fetus, rubella can cause a miscarriage or lead to severe birth defects, such as heart problems, liver or spleen damage, blindness, and intellectual disability. At least 32,000 babies worldwide are born annually with congenital rubella syndrome. About a thirdof them die before their first birthday.
Rubella is transmitted through coughing and sneezing, and up to half of people who spread the infection do not know they have it. Most women who contract rubella in adulthood say they experience arthritis. In rare cases, rubella can also cause brain infections and bleeding problems. There is no specific treatment.
Before a vaccine was licensed in the United States in 1969, rubella was common among young children, with surges occurring on a six- to nine-year cycle. In 2004, the United States declared the disease eliminated. Infections are now mostly imported from other parts of the world; annual cases fell from about 47,000 before the vaccine to just six in 2020.
Polio
Parents in the early 1950s lived with a terror few could later imagine: the substantial prospect that their child could touch the wrong toy and end up in a wheelchair, an iron lung or a grave.
Polio epidemics, which had been occurring for decades, had gained new magnitude by the middle of the 20th century, killing or paralyzing more than half a million people worldwide each year. Families were avoiding public spaces and turning down summertime play dates, knowing that the malady struck fast: In the words of the historian and author Richard Rhodes, “One day you had a headache and an hour later you were paralyzed.”
In some parts of the world, the disease is still a major threat. It is transmitted by exposure to fecal matter, such as on contaminated foods or objects. Most people who contract the virus have no visible symptoms, though they can still pass it on. About a quarter develop common flu symptoms such as a sore throat, fever and nausea.
In severe cases, polio can affect the nerves and brain, causing meningitis and paralysis. When the muscles responsible for breathing are affected, the case can be lethal. And even decades after a resolved polio infection, people can experience muscle weakness and atrophy, which is referred to as post-polio syndrome.
In the United States, vaccines drove paralytic polio cases down from more than 21,000 in 1952 to just one in 1993. But in 2022, the C.D.C. confirmed a new case in Rockland County, N.Y., which had low vaccination coverage. The agency called the single case a public health emergency.
Emily Baumgaertner is a national health reporter for The Times, focusing on public health issues that primarily affect vulnerable communities. More about Emily Baumgaertner
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