Schwartz regularly teaches courses and gives lectures on vaccination issues, health policy and the U.S. health care system, pharmaceuticals and the FDA, science advice to government, and related topics. The Spanish Flu, Epidemics, and the Turn to Biomedical Responses. Nature Immunology 2012, 13:521-4. Vaccine 2017, 35:5543-5550. The ACIP remains influential domestically and globally. Overview.
Real-World Evidence, Public Participation, and the FDA. State Vaccination Requirements for HPV and Other Vaccines for Adolescents, 1990-2015.
New media, old messages: themes in the history of vaccine hesitancy and refusal. American Journal Of Public Health 2017, 107:1892-1893. This study reports on the changes to the vaccination recommendations by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices and the status of implementation of requirements by the states. The Uncertain Future of Human Papillomavirus Vaccination School Requirements. When Not All That Counts Can Be Counted: Economic Evaluations And The Value Of Vaccination. Schwartz's publications have appeared in The New England Journal of Medicine, The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), The American Journal of Public Health, Health Affairs, The Milbank Quarterly, and elsewhere. Vaccine Pricing and US Immunization Policies. Developments regarding human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines will transform HPV vaccination in the United States while simultaneously raising several new policy and ethical concerns.
Rotavirus vaccines, intussusception, and risk-benefit assessments. Comparative Effectiveness Research Awards, Cost-Effectiveness, the QALY, and the evLYG, Patient, Manufacturer, and Other Stakeholder Engagement. The November 2009 creation of the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues by the Obama administration signals a new chapter in the history of federal bioethics advice.1 Coming several months after the previous group, the President's Council on Bioethics, was disbanded, the establishment of the new commission adds to the thirty-fi... On October 22, 1999, an influential advisory committee at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced that it no longer recommended the use of a vaccine against rotavirus, a leading cause of severe pediatric gastroenteritis and death worldwide. ... 5 Political leaders also play a role in spreading misinformation. 15. ... Reasons for the widespread lack of requirements for HPV vaccination are complex and likely include the persistent reluctance of states to revisit early efforts at enacting requirements that failed for predominantly political reasons. This project is supported by the National Institutes of Health. While the child's healthcare professional is often in the best position to offer relevant counsel on immunization to vaccine-hesitant parents.