Does the flu vaccine prevent one from being a carrier of the virus(es)?

We’ve never gotten the influenza vaccines (well, I did one years ago and got a terribly swollen and sore arm from it) because we’re not in high risk categories, and it just seemed ethical to leave the vaccine to those who need it more, especially in years of shortage.

This year we do have an at-risk household member, our 7 month micropreemie, WhyBaby. She’ll be getting the RSV immunization, as well as pneumoncoccal and the rest of the standard baby shots (minus Hepititis and Varicella), but she’s too young for the flu shot. Getting influenza would be deadly for her.

Would it help protect her any if I, her father and her school-age brother got the flu vaccine? Would it endanger her further? I know some vaccines shouldn’t be given if someone in the household is high risk because it can make the vaccinated person shed virus and get the unvaccinated person sick. But I can’t seem to find details on this vaccine in particular.

Ask her doctor. As far as I remember, getting the flu vaccine doesn’t necessarily keep you from getting the flu (it may prevent one strain), but it will be much less severe if you do encounter the one you are vaccinated against. I have had people who’ve received flu shots say they felt all flu-y after the vaccination. WhyBaby’s doctor would be your best source on this one.

And just how is that precious angel? Her last crop of pics show a beautiful baby! Now I’m going to get out of here before I start talking baby talk, yes I am, you cutie…

Ah, right. I should’ve mentioned that I have asked her doctor, and she didn’t know. She’s asking her folks at the CDC, and I’m asking y’all. We’ll see who gets answers first!

(And WhyBaby’s doing great! Greatly? Whatever.)

[slight hijack] Her doctor admitted she didn’t know something? Wow - you have found an exceptional doctor! [/hijack]

There’s millions of things I don’t know, does that make me an exceptional doctor too? :dubious:

From the WHO influenza vaccine website:

Bolding mine

Yep, I like her a lot. We had a real heart-to-heart when I interviewed her (before the baby was even released from the hospital and she had not seen her yet) where I told her exactly what I want from a doctor - a resource who can help provide me with the information I need to make informed health care decisions for my daughter. I don’t do well with doctors who present themselves as authority figures first and caregivers second. I’m an intelligent and fairly well read woman who just needs a doctor’s advice - not orders - and signature on school forms. I asked her if she was comfortable working under these conditions, and she said she’d be delighted to work with someone who was taking responsibility for their own health care for once. We’re quite a match.

Part of that deal is that she’s up front with me when she doesn’t know something, and I give her a few days to go do research and tell me what she’s learned.

But, as part of my not taking any one person as authority on everything, I like to ask others as well. If there’s no conflict, great! Decision made. If I get conflicting answers, it tells me I need to do more research.

Thanks USCDiver! I think what **Snakescatlady **meant was having a doctor who admits to a patient that he or she doesn’t have the answer is a rare gift. Too many (IMHO) doctors still try to play omniscient to their patients.

You’re welcome WhyNot. I’d still be interested in what your pediatrician finds out from the CDC, because I use that argument with my colleagues who do not want to get the vaccine (I work in the ER, everyone who works there should get the shot).

If the vaccine prevents you, spouse, and WhyBrother from catching the flu and bringing it home, then yeah - it’ll help prevent WhyBaby from catching the flu from you.

However, the situation in which you have contact with an infected person, have viruses on your skin, then touch WhyBaby while the viruses are still in place - that could (I imagine) lead to her catching the flu. IANAIDS (Infectious Disease Specialist… well, I’m not any kind of scientist) so I have no clue how likely that is to happen, but it is at least plausible. Of course, that would be a risk whether you’d been immunized or not.

It’s possible the flu vaccine this year may not match the strains of flu that actually wind up going around. And it’s possible that you might not gain immunity, even if the shot is accurate. Still, I’d think it makes sense to reduce the family’s chances of catching the flu and bring home those nasty virii.

We used that logic when Moon Unit was an infant. I’ve gotten the shots for 20+ years because I’m higher-risk (asthma); the year Moon Unit was born, Papa Zappa got the shot too, for just the reason you’re talking about.

As I understand it, you should probably avoid FluMist because that uses a live, weakened virus that could put high-risk family members at risk.

From the WHO link:

Out of those three types, the safest for you would be the last, assuming equal efficacy between the three. The chance of you getting infected with live virus from any of the three is very low, but lowest from the third, because they’re only injecting a couple of proteins rather than entire virus particles.

OK, so here’s what she said (with cites!):

We should all, including the baby, get vaccinated this year. Makes me damn nervous vaccinating an infant this young, but apparently the recommendations are for 6 months and up actual age, preemies not considered differently. gulp

We should not get the live virus injection or the nasal spray, because both of those do lead to viral shedding. Theoretically, this viral shedding could increase the chances of those around us who aren’t vaccinated, or whose vaccinations aren’t effective, getting influenza. The studies she could find confirmed viral shedding, but did not examine whether or not that shedding actually made anyone sick. Still, she’s recommending we all be very conservative: vaccinate the baby, because she’s technically 7.5 months (even though she has the body of a 3.5 month old), and then vaccinate us in case her vaccination doesn’t “take”.

She did mention, USCDiver, that the CDC does say anyone working with at-risk individuals should be vaccinated, both to prevent getting it themselves and to protect those individuals from getting it from them. ER workers are definitely in that group.

Here’s the CDC report on the live attenuated virus vaccine, which includes information about viral shedding studies, including:

This site also says, however, that only persons working with or who have household member who are “severely immunocompromised” should avoid the live vaccine. All other workers are advised to avoid working with or coming in close contact with severly immunocompromised patients for 7 days if they recieve the live vaccine, and people visiting or working with those who are not severely immunocompromised have no restrictions, no matter which vaccine they’ve gotten:

That’s seems like a pretty clear recomendation to me, USCDiver: “Close contacts of persons at high risk for complications from influenza should receive influenza vaccine to reduce transmission of wild-type influenza viruses to persons at high risk.”

Here’s the National Institute of Health report on the vaccines, which specifies contraindications for the nasal mist due to the potential for viral shedding:

So it’s split-virus vaccines all 'round, then!

Thanks all for your help.

Thanks, interesting stuff. I still doubt I’ll be able to convince my hardheaded colleagues to get the shot.