Opinion
Denying kids HPV vaccine dangerous
Looking for a print version?
Simply use your browser’s ‘Print’ command and a printer-friendly document will be generated automatically.
Also by Gabbie Wade:
- Texting can donate to more than telecoms (April 13, 2007)
- Short-term gain, long-term pain (March 28, 2007)
- Americans ignore strife for sideshow (February 23, 2007)
- WHO owes Indonesia bird flu protection (February 9, 2007)
- Innocence Project uncovers major flaws in American legal system (January 26, 2007)
Upon entering the sixth grade, most girls are completely unaware of a virus that will have plagued about half of them by the time they reach adulthood. The statistics show that at least one in every two sexually active young women has had the human papillomavirus, or HPV, and by age 50, about 80 percent of women will have contracted HPV. The first broad national estimate states that one in four U.S. women aged 14 to 59 is infected with a form of HPV that can cause cervical cancer. About a quarter of a million women die from cervical cancer each year, and HPV is cervical cancer's leading cause.
In June 2006, the Food and Drug Administration approved a vaccine for HPV, and with such shocking statistics, it seems that the new vaccine should be welcomed with open arms. Scientists are constantly searching for cancer treatment and prevention, and this vaccine is the first approved vaccine proven to prevent a form of cancer.
In many states, however, the new vaccine is less than celebrated. In fact, it is often met with opposition due to introduced legislation attempting to require that young girls be vaccinated before they become sexually active. Numerous officials in states including Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Maine, Michigan and Texas are presenting bills that would mandate the HPV vaccine for girls entering the sixth grade.
Wisconsin is among the states introducing legislation, but it is taking a less strict approach. A new bill, created in January 2007, would require a parent or guardian of any girl entering the sixth grade to give the school a written statement stating the girl has received the HPV vaccine. If a parent is strongly opposed to the vaccine, he may write a note stating that he has received information about it and opted out of giving the girl the vaccine.
But why would parents prevent their daughters from receiving vaccines that would protect against cancer?
Because HPV is a sexually transmitted infection, many parents believe that by shielding their children from HPV, they will be sending a message to their kids that they condone premarital sex. According to Julaine Appling, the CEO of The Family Research Institute of Wisconsin, "This bill is an emotional response that at best jeopardizes the rights of parents to make the very best health decisions for their children."
Since when is not protecting your children from a very prevalent and frequently fatal infection considered the "best health decision" for them? Personally, I take the opposite stance and think that the proposed Wisconsin bill offers too much freedom.
Although some, like Ms. Appling, argue that there is not enough knowledge of the possible negative side effects of the vaccine, it has been tested in more than 11,000 girls aged 9 to 26 years old, and there have been no serious problems. Although opponents of the vaccine argue that we may find unhealthy side effects 20 years down the line, without the vaccine it is positive that in just one year, about 6.2 million Americans will have been infected with a genital HPV infection, and it is estimated that about 10,500 women will have developed invasive cervical cancer from HPV, resulting in approximately 3,900 fatalities.
The fact is that, despite parents' desires or beliefs, girls often do have premarital sex. If parents are allowed to opt out of giving their daughters the vaccine, they are essentially given the choice of putting their kids at a much higher risk of developing cervical cancer in their lifetimes.
And even if parents do get messages of abstinence through to their daughters, there is no guarantee that their daughters' husbands will have abstained. Men may often carry the disease without any symptoms and could pass HPV on to their wives without even knowing they have it. No matter what parents do, without the vaccine, girls are still vulnerable to HPV and cervical cancer.
Parents also worry their daughters will be more prone to having unprotected sex at earlier ages. The common belief is that girls will feel invincible to cervical cancer and genital warts, so they will feel no need to use condoms. If given proper information about the vaccine, however, kids should be no more likely to engage in unprotected sex, because the vaccine does not protect against other STIs or pregnancy.
A final concern opponents have about the vaccine is that vaccinated girls may be less likely to get pap smears to test for cervical cancer. If they believe they cannot get cervical cancer, why should they bother going to the gynecologist? Again, if educated about the vaccine, girls will learn the vaccine only protects from two strains of HPV that cause 70 percent of cervical cancer cases, and therefore, women must still get pap smears because there is still some chance of getting other forms of cervical cancer.
Essentially, this vaccine is a huge breakthrough and should be viewed optimistically. The vaccine should be administered to all girls in Wisconsin before they become sexually active, when it is most effective. If we can prevent millions of deaths each year and protect one of every two sexually active young women from a potentially serious disease, we absolutely should.
Gabbie Wade (gwade@wisc.edu) is a freshman intending to major in journalism.
8 Comments
Top Classified Ads (view all)
Place your classified ad online and have it show up here. Your ad will hit thousands of viewers a day!
DON'T READ ME! Too late. If you're reading this, guess how many other people are reading it. See... advertising in The Badger Herald does work!






IP hash: de692621
Gabbie, the vaccine will still be available to those who want to purchase it. That means that the well-off will reduce their risk of cervical cancer and the poor (or ignorant) will continue to have the same risk of cervical cancer.
IP hash: 6350d0a6
Dear Gabby, You are well on your way to becoming just the sort of journalist we have too many of now. I don’t mean to be harsh, but you have not done your homework. You are not presenting a balanced article; you have written an opinion piece and presented it as fact. You have also presented some factual information in a misleading way. For instance, you say the vaccine “has been tested in more than 11,000 girls aged 9 to 26 years old, and there have been no serious problems.” This may be true, but when put another way, also true, the fact is that of the 11,000 females who were in these trials, less than 1,200 were under 16 years of age. And, obviously, you and I have a different idea of what “serious problems” might constitute. Did you check the Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting system? You should also mention how very short a time this vaccine has been on the market, and that long term effects are, as yet, unknown.
If I were your professor, I’d ask you to read the following, and then write an article about why Dr. Harper, who had a major role in the development of this vaccine, cannot get any of the major newspapers to print the cautions she offers. http://www.kpcnews.com/articles/2007/03/14/onlinefeatures/hpvvaccine/hpv01.txt
IP hash: 31196c73
Dear Gabbie,
You state that about a quarter of a million women die of cervical cancer each year. You forgot to tell your readers that those stats reflect world wide estimates. The 3900 deaths appear to be very few considering so many are “infected”. Are you so sure HPV causes cervical cancer? Why not penile cancer in men since just as many are “infected”. Perhaps viruses do not cause cancer, and cervical cancer is like other cancers and is a lifestyle disease. You want to stick millions of children with needles for what? Corporate profit? The worship of “science”? Many parents are concerned that vaccines cause autism and other neurological disorders. We are very weary.
IP hash: 34f51f46
Yeah, thanks for posting the entire article, I just can never figure out how links work.
IP hash: 3986322a
Yes, HPV causes cervical cancer, and causes penile cancer, and anal cancer, and vulvar and vaginal cancers, and esophageal cancers, and mouth cancers, and head and neck cancers. But the vast majority of cancers are cervical, and hence a problem for women.
IP hash: 04ad0ee0
“Denying kids HPV vaccine [is] dangerous” “The vaccine should be administered to all girls in Wisconsin…”
You should like a talking head for the pharmaceutical companies. I really doubt that there has been a sufficient test population of young girls for us to believe there are no ill side-effects for girls this young.
IP hash: 41e752e2
The US currently ranks 39th in health care outcomes even though we spend twice as much as the next closest country. One reason for this poor quality and high cost is because big business plays such a huge role in medicine.
Over 400,000 women a year die from heart diease and only 4,000 a year (not a quarter million) die from cervical cancer. Of those 60% haven’t had a pap smear in the past 3 years. They are often recent minorities, immigrants, the poor or women in rural areas and are also the very same ones who probably won’t get the vaccine. So at most 40% or 1600 women who would die from cervical cancer will get the vaccine.. oh wait.. it only protects against 70% of the viruses so even with the vaccine and paps 480 will still die..Out of 4,000 deaths currently it would save only 1120 women a year.
We are going to spend billions and give a shot to young women (and there were 40 cases of side effects that included paralysis) and no girls under 15 got the 3 shot series all across the US in order to prevent at most 1100 deaths? Each of those people is valuable but there are far more people who lack even the most basic health care in this country that the money could go to help.
The only people that this drug will benefit are the stockholders of the drug companies and the head of their marketing dept.
IP hash: f1e83022
Comments on this article have been turned off.