# 6006
I was in the process of reading a paper on reactions following the administration of the MMR vaccine that appears this morning in the PloS One journal (and considering blogging on it), when luckily I saw that Helen Branswell of the Canadian Press has already covered the story.
The paper can be read at:
Adverse Events following 12 and 18 Month Vaccinations: a Population-Based, Self-Controlled Case Series Analysis
Kumanan Wilson, Steven Hawken, Jeffrey C. Kwong, Shelley Deeks, Natasha S. Crowcroft, Carl Van Walraven, Beth K. Potter, Pranesh Chakraborty, Jennifer Keelan, Michael Pluscauskas, Doug Manuel
Helen’s article appears this morning on the Global News website, and so I’m going to do the smart thing and quickly step aside and let one of the best science writers in the business explain the findings.
MMR vaccine reactions fairly common at 12 months, but serious reactions rare
Helen Branswell, Monday, December 12, 2011 9:28 PM
Global News | MMR vaccine reactions fairly common at 12 months, but serious reactions rare
Related Post:
- Branswell On Flu Vaccine Matches
- mBio: Coronavirus Has An Affinity For Multiple Hosts
- Branswell On Expanded Surveillance For The Coronavirus
- Novartis Fluad And Agriflu Vaccines Suspended In Canada
- SARS Virus Placed On Select Agents List
- Branswell Updates The Novel Coronavirus Story
- Osterholm: Time To Close The Pig Barns
- Branswell On Lifting The H5N1 Research Moratorium
- Pediatrics: Low Uptake Of Flu Vaccine Among Toddlers In Ontario
- NSABB Clears H5N1 Studies For Publication
- NSABB To Re-examine H5N1 Research Risks
- Branswell: WHO Hopes H5N1 Studies Can Be Published By Summer
- Branswell On The Transmissibility Of The H3N2v Virus
- Branswell On the CFR Of H5N1
- Eurosurveillance: Older People May Be Susceptible To The H3N2v Virus
- WHO: Will Host H5N1 Talks In Geneva
- Branswell On The Research Moratorium
- Branswell: WHO on H5N1 Research Controversy
- Publish or Perish The Thought?
- Three Would Make For A Crowded Viral Field
- Branswell On The New trH3N2 Flu Virus
- CIDRAP: New Details In The trH3N2 Story
- Branswell On The WHO Response To trH3N2
- More Details On The trH3N2 Story
- The Risks Of Chikungunya Outbreaks In The United States
- Study: Statins & Cerebral Malaria
- PLoS One: Influenza Viral Shedding & Asymptomatic Infections
- An Unwanted Lagniappe From The Kitchen
- NIH: News From The Human Microbiome Project
- PLoS One: Seroprevalence Of H9N2 In Poultry Workers – Pune, India
- PLoS One: Viremia In The 2009 H1N1 Pandemic Influenza
- PLoS One: H1N1 Seroprevalence Study
- PLoS: Human-Type H5N1 Receptor Binding In Egypt
- NIH: School Closings Effective In 2009 Pandemic
- MRSA: It’s Got Seasonality
- PLoS One: A Single Mutation That Enhances H1N1 Transmission
- PLoS One: Pathways Of H5N1 Exposure
- PLoS Medicine: Effectiveness Of The 2009 Pandemic Vaccine
- Referral: CIDRAP On Airborne Influenza Transmission
- PLoS Medicine: Mono or Combo Antiviral Therapy?
- PLoS Essay: Reflections On The International Pandemic Response
- When Pigs Flu
- When Viruses Don’t Read The Manual
- PLoS Medicine: 6 Pandemic Informational Challenges
- Study: Student Behavior During Pandemic School Closings
- Study: An Economic Appraisal Of Universal Flu Vaccination
- Study: Years Of Life Lost Due To 2009 Pandemic
- Study: Quantifying H1N1 Risk Factors
Widget by [ Iptek-4u ]