Hydrogen Cyanide said:
If you have evidence that supports breastfeeding as a way to skip the infant vaccine for pertussis from a reputable source, please share.
Breastfeeding is never a way to skip any vaccination, even if the mother is immune to her eyeballs. Passive immunity only protects for a very short time, in fact just about the length of time the mother's milk is being ingested. The mother gives her own ready-made antibodies, which does nothing at all to enable the child to produce its own in the future.
The difficulty introduced by maternal immunity is that it's a very good way of preventing a vaccine from working - the passively-acquired antibodies destroy the vaccine and acquired immunity doesn't happen. Bugger.
This is why the timing of puppy and kitten vaccinations is crucial. Too late, and the infant is at risk from disease, but too early and the vaccine may be nixed by maternal antibodies. Hence the whole stuff about isolating puppies until they have had their vaccination course - if you knew they had good maternal immunity that wouldn't be necessary, but of course if you knew they hadn't you'd just vaccinate sooner. This is why guide dog puppies get an extra shot of vaccine, at six weeks, so that those without maternal immunity will be protected and the puppies can be socialised ASAP. However, it's then assumed that that wouldn't have taken, and the usual course administered at 10 and 12 weeks.
I recently advised a client to do the same with her labrador puppies, after having identified the mystery disease that was strking them at about the time they were let out into her stable yard as parvovirus. The timing was just when maternal immunity was probably fading.
Bottom line, maternal immunity is passive, and won't protect you past the time you were given the ready-made antibodies. Vaccination confers active immunity, using pathogen analogues to educate the immune system to produce its own antibodies.
Rolfe.
PS. Would someone mind explaining whether breast milk is a significant source of maternal immunity for human babies? Humans have a haemoendothelial placenta, which allows close enough contact between maternal and foetal circulation for antibodies to cross to the foetus. This is why rhesus babies get sick as foetuses, long before any milk is ingested. In contrast animals all have many more layers of placenta between the foetal and maternal circulations, so that antibodies cannot cross from maternal to foetal circulation. As a result, foetal/maternal antibody incompatibility doesn't show up until after birth (it's called haemolytic anaemia of the newborn), and can be entirely prevented by preventing the neonate from drinking their dam's colostrum. And it's why colostrum is so absolutely vital to baby animals as it's the only way they get passive immunity, but human women can get away with bottle feeding.
So, as I see it, a human infant is likely to have all or at least most of its maternally-derived passive immunity quotient at birth already.