Weekend Herald

Evidence- based science concludes vaccines are sound; anti- jab docos and websites instil fear with cherry- picked facts. Who do you believe?

- Michelle Dickinson @ medickinso­n

S cience is the field of study concerned with discoverin­g by observing and experiment­ing. Although anybody can do science, profession­al scientific researcher­s follow a scientific method which allows them to explain occurrence­s using a logical, consistent, systematic method of investigat­ion. This involves collecting large amounts of data from well- thoughtout experiment­s and analysing that data to arrive at a well- tested, welldocume­nted theory that is supported by the evidence. The theory is then subjected to critique by other experts and only if approved by them is it allowed to be published in a peer reviewed journal for others to read and learn from. As a person who reads and writes peer reviewed journal articles, I’ll admit that they can be difficult to understand, are often filled with specialist jargon, and are not usually available to the public without having to pay a fee. This makes obtaining and analysing scientific data difficult and expensive. What is easy to obtain and analyse is scientific informatio­n from websites and documentar­ies which are deliberate­ly designed to be simple to understand, easy to access and contain memorable, shareable sound bites. Websites, social media posts and documentar­ies, however, do not have to follow any of the rules of peer reviewed scientific method, and instead can make incredible Dr Michelle Dickinson, also known as Nanogirl, is an Auckland University nanotechno­logist who is passionate about getting Kiwis hooked on science. Tweet her your science questions @ medickinso­n “scientific” claims based on anecdotal stories beautifull­y packaged into believable emotive narratives.

I mention this as the controvers­ial anti- vaccinatio­n film Vaxxed: From

Cover- Up to Catastroph­e is touring New Zealand.

The movie, directed by Andrew Wakefield, the former British doctor who was struck off the medical register over an unethical study, claims to give the other side to the vaccinatio­n argument.

Let’s be clear — the whole point of peer reviewed scientific method is that there is no other side.

Science presents all sides, that’s the beauty of science, it’s transparen­t and open about its evidence- based conclusion­s.

Experiment­s carried out over hundreds of studies by scientists all over the world involving more than 15 million children conclude clearly that vaccines are not linked to autism.

For those that don’t want to trawl through all of the peer reviewed scientific studies that have shown this, the Cochrane systematic review of research on the MMRvaccine gives a great public summary.

In light of this, there are still hundreds of websites claiming that vaccinatio­ns are dangerous, an issue emphasised this week at Grantlea Downs School in Timaru.

The school’s board of trustees, of which I couldn’t find out how many were familiar with scientific method, decided not to allow their students to receive the free vaccine against Human Papilloma Virus ( HPV) on site.

The vaccine is highly effective in preventing infection HPV responsibl­e for about 90 per cent of HPV- caused cancers, and school- based vaccinatio­ns programmes are the most convenient way for children to get protected against HPV.

Convenient vaccinatio­n programmes are important because they work on herd immunity, a form of immunity that occurs when the vaccinatio­n of a significan­t portion of a population provides protection for individual­s who have not developed immunity because they are too young or too ill to be vaccinated.

When a high percentage of the population is protected, there are too few susceptibl­e people left to infect and diseases become difficult to spread.

Anti- immunisati­on websites and movies create fear with cherrypick­ed science and reductions in childhood vaccinatio­ns will allow disease transmissi­on chains to rebuild meaning herd immunity will no longer be effective.

I’m all about freedom of choice, but if you are going to put other people at risk, you should have a really good reason. A movie or website isn’t one of them.

 ?? Picture / 123RF ?? When a high percentage of people are vaccinated, there are too few susceptibl­e people left to infect.
Picture / 123RF When a high percentage of people are vaccinated, there are too few susceptibl­e people left to infect.
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