Abstract
Beginning in January 1997, American immunization policy allowed parents and physicians to
elect one of three approved infant vaccination strategies for preventing poliomyelitis. Although
the three strategies likely have different outcomes with respect to prevention of paralytic
poliomyelitis, the extreme rarity of the disease in the USA prevents any controlled comparison.
In this paper, a formal inferential logic, originally described by Donald Rubin, is applied to
the vaccination problem. Assumptions and indirect evidence are used to overcome the inability
to observe the same subjects under varying conditions to allow the inference of causality from
non-randomized observations. Using available epidemiologic information and explicit
assumptions, it is possible to project the risk of paralytic polio for infants immunized with oral
polio vaccine (1·3 cases per million vaccinees), inactivated polio vaccine (0·54 cases per million
vaccinees), or a sequential schedule (0·54–0·92 cases per million vaccinees).
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. Infectious or Acquired Motor Neuron Diseases;Neuromuscular Disorders of Infancy, Childhood, and Adolescence;2015