Healthy Living

What You Need to Know About the HPV Vaccine, and Why It’s Controversial

October 16, 2008

Gardasil is recommended for girls, but boys and women can get it too.
(AFP/GETTY IMAGES)
By Louise Sloan

Almost everyone carries the human papillomavirus (HPV), and it’s usually pretty harmless. But a few strains are the main cause of cervical cancer. Gardasil, the HPV vaccine approved by the FDA in 2006, guards against two of these strains, plus two other strains that are responsible for most genital warts.

Since most adults have already been exposed to HPV, the vaccine is recommended for girls who haven’t become sexually active yet. (The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends vaccination at age 11 or 12, but Gardasil is approved for girls as young as 9.)

So far, so good. But the introduction of this new vaccine has stirred up a small fuss.

The controversy
Perhaps the main fear of the vaccine’s opponents is that it might encourage adolescent promiscuity.

H. Hunter Handsfield, MD, a clinical professor of medicine at the University of Washington and a nationally recognized STD expert, believes most parents are all for it, however. “It can prevent cancer?” he says, parroting the most common parental concern. “Well, duh, give my kid the shot.”

Still, questions come up all the time because the vaccine is so new. Here are a couple of the most common:

1. Should boys get the HPV vaccine?
Men rarely get cancer from HPV, but they do pass the virus to their female partners, and they do get genital warts from HPV as well. In Europe and the U.K., Gardasil is licensed for use in both boys and girls, although so far only Austria’s public health program actually recommends vaccinations for both.

The reason it’s not generally recommended for boys in the U.S. is because it hasn’t been approved for use in boys. General thinking may be, too, that it’s more cost-effective, from a public-health standpoint, to vaccinate girls only. And insurance companies won’t cover vaccines that aren’t recommended. Gardasil retails at around $375 for the three-dose course.

Next page: What about women over 26?


Seven Vaccines You Need Right Now

April 22, 2008

Three months before she gave birth last year, Diana Simpson, a dental hygienist in Davison, Michigan, started coughing uncontrollably. The pain in her throat and chest was unbearable. “It brought me to tears,” she remembers. Simpson’s family doctor tested her for asthma, but she didn’t have asthma. She had pertussis, a bacterial infection that usually goes by the name whooping cough because of its distinctive seal-like cough.
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You’re Not Too Young for Shingles

April 22, 2008

The first sign was tingling along the right side of my hairline, above my forehead. Nearly two pain-filled months later, I had a permanent scar and had to change my hairstyle to hide it. Along the way I learned that shingles isn’t just an illness for older people. Women like me, 35 years old at the time and constantly on the go, are vulnerable, too. My advice: Know the signs and possible triggers—and don’t ignore them. Also, depending on your age, get vaccinated (See seven vaccines you need right now).
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New Reason to Get a Flu Shot?

April 22, 2008

A dangerous bug known as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) may aggressively attack flu-weakened lungs, according to William Schaffner, MD, head of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. MRSA was previously confined to hospitals but is spreading into communities nationwide. The link is unclear, but there may be a connection in the way that flu weakens the immune system and MRSA attacks it. MRSA is often marked by nasty skin infections. The strains contracted outside the hospital are now associated with some 13,500 deaths in the United States each year, many involving flu sufferers. “If you need further motivation to get a flu shot,” Schaffner says, “there it is.”

By Jessica Snyder Sachs


Related Links:


Read This BEFORE You Get a Flu Shot

February 25, 2008

Nobody wants to get the flu this year. The dreaded, head-pounding, body-aching, feverish, nauseating, cough-fest packs equal parts misery and inconvenience.

But nobody wants to get a shot that might be unnecessary or ineffective, either. So, while some experts worry aloud about a 1918-like flu pandemic, most of us—well aware of the risks of getting the virus, from being sneezed on at the office to living with a toddler—are not lining up to get the shot. In fact, only a third of us even bother. The truth is, while the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and most mainstream docs are pushing the flu vaccine, the latest science suggests it just doesn’t work very well. So, should you or shouldn’t you? Here, the answers to your flu-shot questions.

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Your Healthy Travel Planner: What You Need to Know About Vaccines, Risky Hot Tubs, and More

November 1, 2007

Q: Do I need special health or accident insurance when I’m traveling?
A: It may be a smart idea if you are going overseas or on a cruise. Some medical policies don’t cover you when you’re out of the country. Also, find out if your plan covers emergency expenses such as medical evacuation to the United States (which can cost as much as $50,000). You can obtain supplemental plans from many travel agents and private insurers. But make sure you understand in advance if payment will be made directly to the overseas provider or if you’ll have to pay up front and wait for reimbursement. Read More



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