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Whooping Cough Vaccine Controversy 1980's

(43 Posts)
Nandalot Tue 05-Jan-21 19:33:30

We lived in Hampshire when my DD was born in mid 70s and they would not give her the vaccine until she was two because she had bad excema and we had a family history of asthma. Of course, she caught measles aged 22 months and was very poorly with it though thankfully no lasting ill effects. Then when she was eight we moved to a new village and the next week she was ill with whooping cough. Fortunately none of her new friends succumbed otherwise we would have been none too popular,

BlueBelle Tue 05-Jan-21 18:43:09

I remember it very clearly and didn’t know what to do I asked my Gp at the time what he would do ( as I knew he had children) and he said he wasn’t giving his own children the vaccine, so I didn’t None of mine had that vaccine although they had all the others and yes I m sure it was the whopping cough one

Nannytopsy Tue 05-Jan-21 18:15:56

My son had neonatal convulsions ( in the 36 hours after delivery) and the paediatrician advised against the triple vaccine. He had the diphtheria and tetanus without the whooping cough. He caught it when he was about 9 and of course it was pretty horrible for him.

Septimia Tue 05-Jan-21 18:08:35

I remember it too. But I'd had all the vaccinations available, as had DH, so DS got all his too. I thought the debate was really mostly a fad (although, of course, there was a minority of genuine cases where there were problems).

Genty Tue 05-Jan-21 18:06:44

Thousands of babies may have been mistakenly injected with incorrect vaccines in the 1970s, The Observer has discovered.

Confidential records belonging to drug giant GlaxoWellcome show three-month-old infants were potentially given cholera jabs instead of triple vaccines for preventing whooping cough, diphtheria and tetanus.

The company announced last night it would be launching an immediate investigation into the mix-up and the Department of Health also promised to take up the matter. Dr Gordon Cook, an expert in tropical medicine, said it was 'potentially a very serious problem'.

The mix-up is the latest in a series of disclosures about GlaxoWellcome in the 1970s. In July The Observer revealed that thousands of British babies had been given whooping cough vaccine that had not passed crucial safety tests, while claims that sheep and cattle vaccines had been given to Irish babies were blamed on a clerical error.

midgey Tue 05-Jan-21 17:58:41

Certainly remember this, lots of discussions about it at the time. It is a very long time ago and things are very different now.

EllanVannin Tue 05-Jan-21 17:23:19

Both my D's when born in the 60's had the Whooping cough vaccination. I didn't hesitate, after having seen the worst case while working on a children's infection ward.
The benefit outweighed any rare side-effect.

Whooping cough is a killer. You have to witness the disease to see how distressing it is to a small child.

They also had the " sugar lumps " for polio too. It was known as the Sabin vaccine.

Barmeyoldbat Tue 05-Jan-21 17:20:58

My daughter was born in 1972. She didn't have the whooping cough vaccination at the right time as she had a bit of a cold. She was nearly 4 before she did have it and started having seizures not long after after. nobody could say why a healthy there year old should start having seizures out of the blue. Also has some learning difficulties. I always blamed the whooping cough jab and my son 5 children (now adults) have not had the whooping cough jab.

Callistemon Tue 05-Jan-21 16:57:41

Pertussis Vaccine Scare:
academic.oup.com/shm/article/30/2/429/2669669

Callistemon Tue 05-Jan-21 16:52:16

aussiedreamer I remember it too well in the 1970s.

There was a lot of controversy and I didn't get DC1 vaccinated - then she caught whooping cough aged 2. It was a horrible time and I felt very guilty.
My GP assured me it couldn't be whooping cough as it had been eradicated, but other GPs diagnosed it in neighbourhood children.

Peasblossom Tue 05-Jan-21 16:48:00

I remember it. It started in the early 1970s with just two parents who believed their children’s brain damage was due to the vaccine. Journalists became involved and the whole thing blew up, enough for there to be some big new studies and for the Government to promise compensation if that was the case.

Thankfully, after about ten years of studying different cases and data, the studies concluded that the vaccine was safe.

After that it was the MMR that people worried about.

Nothing changes really does it?

Grannynannywanny Tue 05-Jan-21 16:37:10

My recollection is of the measles not whooping cough vaccine. My son was born in 1980 and had febrile convulsions. I was advised by the health visitor not to let him have the booster measles vaccination that was due.

Research later proved the advice wrong but she mad me anxious enough to accept it as gospel at the time.

My son had a very nasty bout of measles when he was around 10. All 4 of my grandchildren have received all of the recommended vaccinations at the appropriate times. If I could turn back the clock I would make sure my son had his as his sister had done uneventfully 2 years before him. I feel strongly that we need to give them all the protection we can.

Shandy57 Tue 05-Jan-21 16:36:17

Having whooping cough is one of my worst childhood memories, I still feel scared now if a spicey food catches my breath.

Santana Tue 05-Jan-21 16:32:52

I don't remember anything either and my eldest is 40, so timing would be right.
Perhaps I dismissed it at the time because I had seen my 2 year old nephew with whooping cough and it was terrifying.

Smileless2012 Tue 05-Jan-21 16:19:24

Hi aussiedreamer and welcome to GNsmile.

Yes I remember it. We were worried about having our first child vaccinated because when he was about 2 months old he got an eye infection that required drops. One time when we were administering them he fainted, he was out cold.

Our GP kept asking if we thought it had been a seizure but as there were no physical indicators like eye rolling or shaking we didn't think it had been.

It never happened again but did make us very wary. Our GP at that time was brilliant and having been told that of course it was our decision I asked him what he would do. He said in our position he wouldn't give the vaccine to his child, so we didn't and because of what happened when he was a baby, we didn't have his brother vaccinated either.

I'm surprised that none of your D's midwives have ever heard about it but then again it was nearly 40 years ago.

Galaxy Tue 05-Jan-21 16:16:40

My brother didnt receive a vaccine in the 70s but I thought it was measles or mumps, it was definitely due to a vaccine scare. He was consequently ill during his o levels.

BigBertha1 Tue 05-Jan-21 16:14:49

I did hear about it as my daughter was born in the early 70s. Its recommended now and I am not aware of any controversy but if there is one someone on here will know all about it!

aussiedreamer Tue 05-Jan-21 16:11:51

Hi! I'm new to Gransnet. Does anyone remember what the Whooping Cough vaccine controversy in the 1970's & 80's was all about? My 2 weren't vaccinated because, as far as I recall the guidance given was not to have them vaccinated if there is a family history of seizures. I'm asking because our daughter is now expecting her first baby & none of the midwives have ever heard about it. Can anyone shed any light on this please?