Parent Magazine St. Johns November 2019 | Page 18

Doctor ASK THE Introducing our new monthly feature, Ask the Doctor. Our healthcare partners will be answering your questions. To submit a question, please email [email protected]. What is the purpose, benefits and risks for the HPV vaccine? Why is it controversial? Meredith Brazell: Recommended by the AAP and the ACIP of the CDC, the HPV vaccination is an opportunity to prevent HPV-related cancer deaths along with genital herpes. According to a publication in the AAP Pediatrics magazine titled “The Need to Optimize Adolescent Immunization,” the HPV vaccine protects against the high-risk HPV types which are responsible for virtually all cases of cervical cancer and a large percentage of cervical, vulvar, vaginal, anal and throat cancers. It also protects against two other HPV strains that are responsible for 90% of genital warts. Part of the controversy is that the lifetime risk of acquiring HPV is 80% and several HPV strains will go away on their own. However the vaccine is covering the cancer 16 | S T. J O H N S parent M A G A Z I N E strains that can cause death and will not go away. Also some cultures believe if their child gets the HPV vaccine, it is giving their child permission to be sexually active therefore they want to wait. This is not the case and the reason to get it at such a young age is that the vaccine is more effective and therefore requiring less doses if given before age 15. Previously, it was not approved for anyone over age 26 although recently changed to 45. However, most children will become sexually active in their lifetime and therefore recommended as early as age nine. The most common side effects are a sore arm, fever, headache and sometime fainting (it is recommended to sit 15 minutes after the vaccine to prevent this). Please see the Vaccine Information Statement on Hepatitis A from the CDC for more information (https://pediatrics.aappublications.org/ content/139/3/e20164186).