I'm going to snoop around Google some more, but everything I find seems kind of biased. Wondering what you ladies think...
Isn't Hep B something you get from sharing needles? If this is the case, what on earth is the shot at birth for? Seems excessive to me...
Please, if you must flame, don't flame too hard. I won't debate the overall vaccine thing. This one in particular just kinda stumps me.
Re: Hep B shot at birth
Guess I'll be breaking the news to my dr about refusing it at my next appt. What about that vitamin K shot? Is that standard, too, or is it just hospitals being extra cautious again?
Newborns are born without vitamin K, which plays an important part in the blood clotting cascade. Personally, I think the vitamin K is important. Do your research on it, there is an oral form of vitamin K available, but the shot is going to give you the quickest results.
We'll likely decline HBV and get vitamin K.
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We opted out. DS is 8 months old and he still hasn't had it. I figure if I'm not worried about him catching HIV then why would I be worried about him catching Hep B? They are transmitted the same way. I was negative for Hep B when I was tested during pregnancy and I am in a monogamous relationship so I had no risk factors. We will do the series before he starts school because the chance of exposure will be greater. If he was in daycare I would also have him get it, no question. We would also get it if anyone in our family had Hep B. We are definitely pro-vaccine but we just didn't see a reason to give this one to a newborn.
As for Vit K, we did get it, because we didn't do the Erythromycin gel and I didn't want to fight the hospital on too many things. We decided the benefits of Vit K outweighed the risk. However, having researched it more extensively since his birth, I would opt out of it next time and go with oral Vit K instead. We plan on having a birth center birth with a CPM for the next birth so I don't think we will get too much push back on this like we may have in the hospital.FYI: Hep B can live on a a dry surface for at least seven days. Dried blood poses an infection risk. HIV does not. We deferred it w/ DS b/c he had jaundice issues at birth, but won't this time. DS got nicked with hair clippers at a salon and it drew blood- now I wish we hadn't deferred it. As PP's said "The younger a person is when infected with Hepatitis B virus, the greater his or her chance of developing chronic Hepatitis B. Approximately 90% of infected infants will develop chronic infection. The risk goes down as a child gets older. Approximately 25%?50% of children infected between the ages of 1 and 5 years will develop chronic hepatitis. The risk drops to 6%?10% when a person is infected over 5 years of age."
https://www.cdc.gov/hepatitis/b/bfaq.htm
Thank you for the information. I do not regret our choice to wait.
The bold parts! I think the Vit K shot is pretty important and something that I thought LO needed to get. To me the benefits of the Vit K shot far outweighed the risks.
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I don't know where you live in Canada, but that is no longer the case in the 2 provinces where we live. We just finished our prenatal classes in NB and have since moved back to Southern Ontario to give birth, and in both provinces they now give the Hep B shot at birth unless declined. You actually need to sign a waiver if you decline the vaccine. One of our last prenatal classes spent over an hour going over vaccines and other tests at birth. When I was younger I was given the shot in grade 6, but that was almost 16 years ago now.
I would have been pretty upset. Parents have a right to know what's being injected into their kiddos
PS on the Vitamin K thing -- I think since I'll be BFing, barring necessary circumstances, I'll be taking a vitamin K supplement the first 6 months or so. If the doctor thinks LO *needs* vitamin K at birth, I'll be opting for the oral drops, not the jab. Since I'm STD-free, I'll be opting out of the antibiotic eyedrops, too. FTR, in case anyone cares lol
I did a lot of reading last night =O
Saskatchewan still gives it in Grade 6; I've reviewed the schedule a lot in the last 18 months.
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My MW encouraged us to wait until BFing was well-established, so we did it at DD's two week appointment. We will do the same with this one.
As for Vitamin K we do it, I'm just not comfortable with taking the chance.
Probably not. While the numbers are accurate (that Hep B is more likely to turn chronic if one catches it at a younger age), the incidence of the disease is quite low in most developed, Western countries, and the risk for childhood exposure is mostly in developing countries where sanitation is an issue in daily life. Because we are a cleaner society, most cases of Hep B are actually through STDs and shared needles, not happenstance infant exposures. Everything I've read about the Hep B vaccine is less about concern for the child's welfare and more about "eradicating" Hepatitis B as if it were smallpox.
Now, yes, of course the incidence of Hep B will lower in response to vaccinations - obviously. But the incidence was low to start off.
I don't believe that small bodies should be inundated with vaccines unnecessarily, as I'm dubious that their immune systems are developed enough to actually handle it propertly. Hep B, no. Polio, and tetanus, yes. Chicken Pox - never. MMR - can be delayed. Diphtheria and Pertussis - maybe - I'd want the doctor to split DPT vaccine. I'll need to look into Vitamin K to make a decision on that. Since I don't have Hep B (I chose to get vaccinated in school when I was still naive and believed everything the teachers told me - I didn't realize that I was extremely low risk), my child won't contract it from me. My blood was also tested for the disease recently. If I had Hep B, I would definitely get the infant vaccinated.
https://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs204/en/
https://www.cdc.gov/hepatitis/PDFs/US-surv_table.pdf
Even assuming that all Hep B cases weren't reported (because they were asymptomatic), let's say there was 10x more the actual incidence than reported, It's still not very high. These are the people who catch the acute infection, but note that not all of them become chronic carriers.
Necessarily, you are going to find higher carriers in the population than new cases of chronic Hep B. In spite of that, chronic cases of Hep B are still quite low (1 and a half million in the US - less than 1% of the population), and you can understand why they would be more common among adults since it is an STD.
I do not think it's necessary to vaccinate babies except under exceptional circumstances. So long as Mom isn't infected (and that is routinely tested for during normal prenatal care) and any primary caregivers aren't, the baby will most likely be fine for quite some time yet.
Note also, that of those who have chronic Hep B (remember less than 1% of the American population), " Hepatitis B is fatal in about 1% of cases."
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000279.htm
When you see statements like "much higher risk of Big Bad Scary Thing", you need to take that into proportion with what the rates actually are to begin with.
I know, though, that some people don't see the harm in the injection. I'll note this:
https://www.aapsonline.org/testimony/hepbcom.htm
That is all.
We declined the Hep B until her 2 month appt.
We didn't receive any negative feedback from the hospital about our choice to delay.
DS2 - Oct 2010 (my VBAC baby!)
Alberta also still gives in only in Grade 5. There is not even any mention of it prior to that.
Vita K we accepted on baby 1 because she was a vacuum delivery and declined on baby 2 because she was a no intervention/no drugs delivery. I'll spare you teh reasoning behind declining because I know most of you won't agree.
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Oh, now I must know. But I understand wanting to avoid TB drama. But I'm so exceedingly curious, feel free to PM me, if you like
done.
Daughter #1 - February 12, 2010
natural m/c March 11, 2011 at 8 1/2 weeks
Daughter #2 - January 11, 2012
Ectopic pregnancy discovered November 6, 2012 at 6 weeks
Daughter #3 - January 19, 2014
Started our exploration into the world of international adoption June 2012. We have no idea what this is going to look like but we are excited to find out!
Our LO will get Vit K and Hep B in the hospital. I will be going back to work 8 weeks postpartum and while I'm reasonably certain my child will not be going out and getting questionable tattoos or sharing needles with anyone, I can't guarantee that they won't accidentally get exposed to Hep B by someone who did while they're not in my care.
For us, the benefits outweighs the risk.
My DD was born in Spain. There the Hep B vaccine is given within the first month, though not usually at the hospital.
Here in Germany my pediatrician told me they don't administer the Hep B vaccine to infants unless there is a reason (mother has it). I will follow the guidelines of wherever we are.
ETA: For DD we got the oral vitamin K in the hospital. I haven't asked what the norm here is yet for LO2, but we will probably get the shot if it's available. DD threw up some strange stuff shortly after getting the oral vitamin K and I was always a little concerned she didn't fully ingest it.
What everyone else has said. My mw mentioned that there had been a big push from a public health perspective to get people vaccinated, so they push it at birth in case the baby never establishes regular care w/ a pedi. From her perspective there was no reason to push this particular vax over any other for a family intending to pursue "normal" infant care with a doc.
FWIW no one fought us one bit on declining it.
Yep - here in AB the immunization schedule administers Hep B vac at age 5. Also, dhviel you have a PM

Not trying to start a war.. I just like to research and found the end of this article informative.
(and we wont be getting the hep b, vitamin k shot or eye ointment. we have our reasons.)
https://www.naturalnews.com/036006_vaccination_doctor_form.html