Would you mind sharing some information with me? I'm currently reading The Vaccine Book but I'm curious about what others do. I don't think I'm going to decide that opting for no vaccines is the way to go for us but so far, I don't like the idea of doing so many at one time.
If you have any resources that you felt really helped you that would be great. Also, if you don't mind sharing how you decided to divide them up that might be helpful, too. PM me if you aren't comfortable sharing - I know this can be a touchy subject.
I'm not trying to start a big debate or anything. I'm just curious what others do or found helpful. TIA!
Re: If you do an alt. vac. schedule...
We follow the Dr. Se.ars schedule with the exception of MMR (he recommends getting separate vaxes for measles, mumps, and rubella, but it is next to impossible to get individual doses here). We delayed MMR until 2 years old with DD and will do the same with DS. The most they ever get at one time is two vaxes and usually it's only one.
By the time she was 3 years old DD was completely caught up with someone who was on the typical schedule.
Do you have to pay a copay every time you go in?
We space them out and opted to delay some a bit. Kate will be fully caught up before she starts preschool at age 3 and was caught up with everything besides Hepatitis by age 2.
I think that vaccines are very important and had no intention of not vaccinating. I also think that the vaccine schedule is crazy heavy on the first year of life. We mainly followed the delayed schedule from the Dr. Sears book so never more than 2 vaccines at a time and at least a month in between vaccines. We prioritize some shots over others.
We got DTaP on time because I was concerned about whopping cough. I felt comfortable delaying Polio until 9 months as it's been eradicated in the Western Hemisphere. (CDC recommends it at 2 months.) I also felt comfortable delaying Hepatitis A and B until now. We are getting Kate caught up for preschool and started on them in November. Hep B was one of the ones I had the biggest problem with as it is recommended at birth. I figured I could keep Kate away from the drugs and hookers until she was *at least* 3 or 4. All joking aside, had she been taken to the NICU and needed an IV or something, we probably would have given it to her.
Kate's first year we got shots at 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 9 months. Our dr has lots of patients on a delayed schedule and they do not charge a copay for shot only visits which is nice. I would have been willing to pay it though. We then got a bit behind because Kate had a reaction to amoxicillin at was covered in hives at her 1 year well visit. There was no way that I was giving her any vaccines then.
We do not vaccinate for flu (though I will reevaluate that once she starts preschool) and were considering skipping chicken pox but Emily can't get that vaccine because of her egg allergy so it made our decision easy. She did have a localized reaction to chicken pox that freaked the nurse out a bit, but that the dr was unconcerned with. Still not sure what to think about that and it makes me nervous for when we get the booster...
ETA: I was also planning on delaying her MMR until she was 2, but we went on a cruise when Kate was 19 months old and I wanted her vaccinated before that. We've been playing catch up for a while because of some allergic reactions (amoxicillin one time and hives from who knows what another time). I usually ask her dr which 2 he thinks are most important at the time and go with those. He personally supports the CDC schedule, but is very supportive of us following a different schedule.
No. Actually, we don't have to pay a copay at all the first time since it's a routine visit and is now included on our insurance. The rest of the shots are given by nurses, so no copay for those visits, either.