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Your Baby's Best Shot: Why Vaccines Are Safe and Save Lives Paperback – January 21, 2015

4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 114 ratings

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Parents can easily be bombarded by conflicting messages about vaccines a dozen times each week. One side argues that vaccines are a necessary public health measure that protects children against dangerous and potentially deadly diseases. The other side vociferously maintains that vaccines are nothing more than a sop to pharmaceutical companies, and that the diseases they allegedly help prevent are nothing more than minor annoyances. An ordinary parent may have no idea where to turn to find accurate information.

Your Baby’s Best Shot is written for the parent who does not have a background in science, research, or medicine, and who is confused and overwhelmed by the massive amount of information regarding the issue of child vaccines. New parents are worried about the decisions that they are making regarding their children’s health, and this work helps them wade through the information they receive in order to help them understand that vaccinating their child is actually one of the simplest and smartest decisions that they can make.

Covering such topics as vaccine ingredients, how vaccines work, what can happen when populations don’t vaccinate their children, and the controversies surrounding supposed links to autism, allergies, and asthma, the authors provide an overview of the field in an easy to understand guide for parents.

In an age when autism diagnoses remain on the rise, when a single infectious individual can help spark an epidemic in three countries, when doctors routinely administer an often bewildering array of shots, and when parents swear their babies were fine until their first dosage of the MMR, the authors hope this book will serve as a crucial resource to help parents understand this vitally important issue.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

Journalist Herlihy and psychologist Hagood dispute the many myths surrounding vaccines in this extensively researched and forceful pro-vaccine text. The book covers a range of topics, including the history of vaccines and their ingredients, as well as detailed descriptions of vaccine-preventable diseases (chicken pox, diphtheria, Hib, mumps, whooping cough). The authors also defend against anti-vaccine arguments, devoting several chapters to the 'myth' surrounding a link between vaccinations and autism, and exploring the cognitive biases that have fueled the vaccine backlash. . . . Indisputably pro-vaccine, this resource will aid parents as they make decisions about vaccinating their children. ― Publishers Weekly

This thoroughly researched book should convince even ardent vaccine skeptics that the benefits of giving kids shots to prevent illnesses far outweigh any negatives. . . . [T]his book, with its extensive notes and bibliography, should go a long way toward convincing even the most leery that vaccines save lives. ―
Booklist

Written for parents who are pro-vaccine or who just want information about what’s in all of those kids’ shots, this book is a great resource. The authors break down everything from ingredients to adverse reactions to the autism myth. This book is not for parents who agree with Jenny McCarthy. She still claims that there is a link between vaccinations and autism. This book whole-heartedly disagrees, and breaks down the medical research to back up their points.

Parents Magazine

Whichever side you fall on in the great vaccine debate, it’s always in your best interest to arm yourself with accurate information. This book discusses the real science behind vaccinations. ―
Foreword Reviews

Herlihy and Hagood came to this book with many doubts and questions and a determination to provide something useful to parents who for one reason or another are worried about vaccinating their children. Anxious parents should take their honest, thorough examination of the subject as helpful advice from two good surrogates for a trusted neighbor or friend. -- Arthur Allen, author,
Vaccine: the Controversial Story of Medicine's Greatest Lifesaver and Ripe: The Search for the Perfect Tomato

Stacy Mintzer Herlihy and E. Allison Hagood have provided an exceptional and thorough explanation of vaccines, including what they are, their history, and how they have single-handedly changed the landscape for raising healthy children. This book is a must read for any new or expecting parent as it is a wonderful resource, giving parents and caregivers the opportunity to truly understand the real science behind vaccinations, as well as the positive impact they have had (and continue to have) on society. Thanks to these authors, I now have a new standard gift that I will be giving to all of my expecting friends, because the first step to making an informed parenting decision, especially when it comes to vaccination, is educating yourself. -- Jeanne Garbarino, PhD, Biology Editor, Double X Science

Written in a clear, concise, no-nonsense fashion, Stacy Mintzer Herlihy and E. Allison Hagood discuss how vaccines work, why they are safe, and why the misinformation spread by the antivaccine movement and alternative medical practitioners is without a basis in science, while describing some of the dangerous quackery that is being promoted to treat "vaccine injury" that is not really vaccine injury. It is essential reading for all new parents with any doubts at all about vaccines. -- David Gorski, MD, PhD, associate professor of surgery at the Wayne State University School of Medicine, and medical director of the Alexander J. Walt Comprehensive Breast Center at the Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute

About the Author

Stacy Mintzer Herlihy is a freelance writer. Her work has appeared in many publications including Big Apple Parent Magazine and USA Today.

E. Allison Hagood is a psychology professor at a community college in Colorado. Before becoming a professor, she was a clinician and researcher specializing in adults with severe mental illnesses. She is a member of the American Psychological Association, theAssociation for Psychological Science, and the Society for the Teaching of Psychology.

Foreword author Paul A. Offit, MD, FAAP, is the chief of Infectious Diseases and the director of the Vaccine Education Center at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, as well as the Maurice R. Hilleman Professor of Vaccinology and professor of pediatrics at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. He has published several books including Vaccinated: One Man's Quest to Defeat the World's Deadliest Diseases and Deadly Choices: How the Anti-Vaccine Movement Threatens Us All.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Rowman & Littlefield Publishers; Reprint edition (January 21, 2015)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 224 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1442215798
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1442215795
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.06 x 0.56 x 8.99 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 114 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.1 out of 5 stars
114 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book provides detailed, factual information about vaccines and how they work. They appreciate the authors' knowledge and perspective on the topic. The book is well-written and easy to understand for readers outside the medical field. Readers appreciate that it protects children from vaccine-preventable diseases.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

13 customers mention "Information content"13 positive0 negative

Customers find the book provides detailed, factual information about vaccines and how they work. They appreciate the well-researched and written content, as well as the authors' knowledge about immunization. The section on vaccine ingredients is well-written, with thoughtful explanations and debunking of many myths. Readers appreciate the scientifically supported text and history of vaccine preventable diseases. Overall, it provides reliable and easy-to-understand information about the safety and efficacy of vaccines.

"Best book to educate other peoples about the importance of vaccine and kids" Read more

"...What I like about the book? 1. Careful, thoughtful explanation and debunking of many of the myths of the anti-vaccine group. 2...." Read more

"...It packs a great deal of information into its 211 pages, with chapters on the history of vaccines, the biology of immunization, vaccine manufacture..." Read more

"This book has 159 pages of dense, scientifically supported text, and still manages to be a pleasure to read...." Read more

8 customers mention "Writing quality"7 positive1 negative

Customers find the book easy to read and well-written for non-medical readers. They appreciate the authors' calm, rational, and optimistic tone.

"...Period, end of story. 6. The authors stay calm, rational and optimistic about vaccines...." Read more

"...an excellent book, and not just because it is carefully researched, well written, and an interesting discussion of an important topic -- although it..." Read more

"Stacy Herlihy and Allison Hagood have written a lively, easy-to-read guide to the realities about vaccines...." Read more

"...The writing is not verbose or flowery, and gets right down to the science and basics of vaccines, the diseases themselves and the true risks of..." Read more

7 customers mention "Protection"6 positive1 negative

Customers appreciate the book's protection. They say it protects children from vaccine-preventable diseases and the suffering they may experience. The book provides a thorough explanation of the human immune system and how vaccines affect it. It also covers the basics of vaccines, diseases, and their true risks.

"...What I like about the book? 1. Careful, thoughtful explanation and debunking of many of the myths of the anti-vaccine group. 2...." Read more

"...It's interesting, careful, thorough and balanced...." Read more

"...In this chapter, the human immune system is explained and how vaccines affect the immune system is explained in non-technical language...." Read more

"...and gets right down to the science and basics of vaccines, the diseases themselves and the true risks of vaccination...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2025
    Best book to educate other peoples about the importance of vaccine and kids
  • Reviewed in the United States on December 26, 2012
    To be honest, I'm fairly knowledgeable about vaccines, and I only purchased this book just to add to my library. I had read several other books from Paul Offit and Seth Mnookin about vaccines, and I'm pretty well tied into research articles on vaccines and immunology, so I wasn't sure I'd be reading it.

    Then, one evening I decided to read the book. What I like about the book?

    1. Careful, thoughtful explanation and debunking of many of the myths of the anti-vaccine group.
    2. The section on vaccine ingredients was well written. This section will now be my go-to source when I write about vaccines.
    3. Well cited, with sources from major peer-reviewed journals. I don't know precisely how many citations there are in the book, but it numbers into the hundreds. (And using the Kindle on my iPad, means all links are hot, so I can quickly review them in a browser).
    4. Being a history aficionado, I love the story about Jenner and the way we came to stop smallpox, a disease that has been eradicated by vaccines. There were other historical vignettes that were interesting too.
    5. The chapter on the HPV vaccine should be a must-read for any parent with teenagers. The HPV vaccine stops a deadly cancer. Period, end of story.
    6. The authors stay calm, rational and optimistic about vaccines. They don't drop into ad hominems or even simple frustration with the outrageous fabrications of the anti-vaccine crowd.

    If you vaccinate your kids, and you don't need convincing, then read this book because you'll have information when someone inevitably gives you some anti-vaccine "advice." If you're vaccinating your kids, but are unsure if it's the right thing to do, or you want to change the vaccine schedule, then read this book because it should allay most, if not all of your fears. If you're not vaccinating your kids, then maybe you'll find information that will convince you to start vaccinating them because it's safe and because it prevents diseases that can kill. Of course, if you're not vaccinating because you accept the misinformation of the anti-vaccine side, you probably won't read this book.

    I do have a couple of very small nits to pick. There was one glaring error about bacteria. It was very very minor, and I'm hoping that future editions will update it. And second, I get the impression that the authors were trying to be as emotionally unbiased as possible, that some parts of the book (like the vaccine ingredients section) seemed very stilted. Of course, that's just an opinion because the danger of most of the ingredients is so laughable that I would have written in a snarky, and probably off-putting tone of voice.

    All in all, this is a great book. It will be a resource for my writing.
    166 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2016
    This is an excellent book, and not just because it is carefully researched, well written, and an interesting discussion of an important topic -- although it is all of these. This book is well worth buying and reading because it is useful.

    Firstly, "Your Baby's Best Shot" is a general resource on vaccines, and a valuable handbook for new parents.
    It packs a great deal of information into its 211 pages, with chapters on the history of vaccines, the biology of immunization, vaccine manufacture and testing. It lists descriptions of individual vaccines, particularly those given in early childhood, and of the diseases they prevent.

    In addition, the book is partly a response to the vaccine opposition that has arisen in recent years. That opposition is, in general, passionate and very poorly informed. It persists because the community of vaccine opponents has become closed to any information inconsistent with its worldview.
    Anyone who tries to learn about the risks and benefits of vaccines by going to the Internet is likely to be engulfed by a tide of conspiracy-minded anti-vaccine sites, all reinforcing one another and each trying to be scarier than the next. "Your Baby's Best Shot" book attempts to counter this by presenting accurate scientific information regarding the benefits of immunization, by directly and honestly discussing its (real, though minor) risks, by pointing out what's true and what has been misunderstood about vaccines in the news, and by giving the reader links and references to a wealth of additional information.

    All this will do nothing to change the minds of true believers, as a glance at the negative reviews of this book will show. But they are not the intended audience for this book. Anyone who wants to know what is objectively true about infectious disease and immunization, and who wants the information necessary to make informed health decisions for his or her family, will get a lot out of this book. That is its intended audience, and it serves those readers extremely well.
    22 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Gady Goldsobel
    4.0 out of 5 stars In general a book I would recommend to read, but there are some issues
    Reviewed in Germany on July 12, 2016
    I must say that I enjoy reading the book and I would recommend it to anyone.
    BUT:
    There are a few things that disturbed me.

    1. The notion that pharmaceutical companies do not make a lot of money from vaccines. First of all, this is completely untrue. Vaccines are not best sellers like Lipitor or Humira, but some are blockbusters. So pharma companies do make a lot of money and that was true even prior to the introduction of Prevnar13, currently the best sold vaccine if I am not mistaken. And that's really okay - vaccines are worth it. Especially the PCV and the HPV vaccines.
    Second, to say that pharmaceutical companies would make much more money developing other drugs is quite irrelevant. For instance, the entire Parkinson's pharmacotherapy market is 3bn a year and drugs are still developed. Same goes for other drugs.

    I think the problem with anti-vax people is that they will always say that the entire science behind vaccines is a fraud and a conspiracy made by pharma companies and regulatory agencies (which of course owned by pharma companies according to anti-vax people). So in the eyes of anti-vax people all the above-written would work against the credibility of this really excellent book and that's a pity. This is why I gave the book only 4 stars although I loved it. I would have given it 3.5 stars I could

    2. Pharmacokinetics/Toxicokinetics of excipients in vaccines - well, what is written in the book is incorrect. intravenous aluminuim is a whole different story than oral taken aluminium than an intramuscular given aluminium. Same goes for the other excipients mentioned in the book. I would even risk to say that I am not sure that the PK of excipients was not studied the way it should have been (that's my conclusion after searching PubMed, so I might be wrong), but luckily, vast experience with administering vaccines to millions of people "trumps" any pharmacokinetic study, so the safety of vaccines is sufficiently shown.
    Nevertheless, the chapter on excipients any other I am sorry, but that chapter is not well researched.

    3. Anti-vax people have, sometimes, very good questions and arguments. I don't mean nutcases but people who are a little more educated. For instance - yes, health authorities are more concerned with the greater good than the health of individuals. This is true for governmental agencies in general, not only for health authorities. So I think that just negating everything that anti-vax people say is the wrong approach. To the contrary - if they have something smart to say once in a while this should be addressed and discussed in length and in view of all other cons and prons.

    But please do not get me wrong - the book is good and should be read by everybody
  • Autismum
    5.0 out of 5 stars The baby book all parents should own
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 16, 2012
    This is a writing duo to be reckoned with. Hagood, a community college psychology professor, announces early on that she is not a parent. Her analysis of the vaccine manufacturversy is a wholly objective one. Herlihy, a writer of wit, charm and experience and, herself, a mother, recounts her tale of paranoia following her daughter being vaccinated, effectively demonstrating the power of anecdote and the human propensity to empathy. Combine these two women and you have a book that sticks like glue to the evidence that "vaccines are safe and save lives" but has huge amounts of heart and a conversational but never flippant tone that conveys a deep understanding of the toll fear and information overload can take on frazzled, possibly sleep deprived parent's critical faculties.
    For a full review visit:
    [...]