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 More parents are refusing to vaccinate their kids. Doctors say they want stricter laws

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SnarkyCupcake
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More parents are refusing to vaccinate their kids. Doctors say they want stricter laws Empty
PostSubject: More parents are refusing to vaccinate their kids. Doctors say they want stricter laws   More parents are refusing to vaccinate their kids. Doctors say they want stricter laws Icon_minitimeMon Mar 09, 2015 11:39 pm

http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/local/story/2015/mar/08/measles-staging-comeback-and-anti-vaccine-mov/292145/[/mention] wrote:

More parents are refusing to vaccinate their kids. Doctors say they want stricter laws Germanymeasleskarr4536562431_t1070_h520fe27bd984ecf4e3d55d49b7f3511e3c14ba28


Dr. Bill Schaffner still remembers the hot summers of his childhood, when he was not allowed to cool off in the public swimming pools.

His parents were too worried about him catching polio.

He remembers the lines that snaked around the block when the polio vaccine came out in the 1950s. And he remembers when the federal government declared in 2000 that measles had been eliminated in the United States.

"We thought we had licked these diseases," said Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. "We were thinking, 'What can we get rid of next?'"
But now Schaffner and other leading infectious disease doctors in the U.S. find themselves gearing up again for a public health battle they had long assumed was over: Childhood vaccinations.

Conversations that typically take place between parents and doctors inside examination rooms have erupted again on the national stage because of the largest spike in measles cases in the last two decades. The 150-person, 17-state outbreak traced to Disneyland is "far and away the most dramatic" byproduct of the anti-vaccine movement, Schaffner says.

Doctors once dismissed the anti-vaccine movement, spurred by widely debunked claims that linked vaccines to autism, as a fad.

But the growing movement has prompted lawmakers across the U.S. to rethink laws that have allowed parents to opt out of vaccine requirements for philosophical or religious beliefs. This year, at least 10 states are considering legislation to limit such exemptions, Reuters has reported.

The laws have won bipartisan support, and include everything from eliminating exemptions to requiring schools to post more detailed vaccination information.

And such policy is crucial, some doctors say, in the face of a debate that is only picking up steam.

"Based on what's happened over the last decade, vaccine skepticism is not going away," Schaffner said. "The need for policy and education is absolutely there. If anything, it will grow."

No bills concerning childhood vaccinations are pending this year in either Tennessee or Georgia, though both are considering laws relating to meningitis vaccine recommendations for college students.

Both states have somewhat narrow childhood vaccination laws: They allow parents to opt out for religious and medical reasons -- known as a philosophical exemption -- but not for personal beliefs.

The result is comparatively high vaccination rates. About 95 percent of Tennessee kindergarten students in public and private schools received the required immunizations last year. Just over 1 percent claimed religious or medical exemptions. Less clear is the status of children who did not fulfill the requirement because they are missing proof of vaccination at the time of the surveys.

Despite this high level of protection, Tennessee still saw four cases of measles in 2014 -- its first cases in three years. Between 1995 and 2013, only nine cases total were reported in the state.

"While we can be proud of our relatively high rates of vaccination in Tennessee, even higher rates would offer greater protection from outbreaks and for vulnerable populations who cannot be effectively vaccinated," Tennessee Health Commissioner Dr. John Dreyzehner said in a statement.

Some doctors, like Schaffner, believe those numbers could be upped by being more stringent on religious exemptions or doing away with the exemption altogether.

"We don't have religious exemptions for parents who want to leave the hospital with their baby without a car seat," he said. "Why should we have one for vaccinations that protect children from life-threatening diseases?"

The choice to vaccinate goes beyond an individual child, doctors say. It's about creating a "cocoon of protection" for children who are especially vulnerable to disease and who cannot be vaccinated because of cancer treatment or other health problems.

"This is a bigger issue than 'what I want or don't want for my child,'" said Connie Bueckner, communicable disease program manager for the Chattanooga-Hamilton County Health Department.

More parents are refusing to vaccinate their kids. Doctors say they want stricter laws Ap2071818843226059483811_t755_h6abbcdf657f0f0179c040242313e6e8d60ff1693

Doing away with religious exemptions is not unprecedented. In Mississippi, for example, the state's Supreme Court upheld a vaccine requirement for school enrollment with no religious exemption, stating that such opt-outs put children at risk.

But such laws have also spurred fierce opposition from advocates who insist that parents, not the government, should decide what's right for their children.

"We consider this an assault on human rights," said Barbara Loe Fisher, director of the National Vaccine Information Center, a Virginia-based nonprofit that monitors vaccine legislation. "You should have the right to make a fully informed, voluntary medical decision without being punished for it."

Fisher has called the last eight weeks "unprecedented" in terms of vaccine-related legislation, and said that rhetoric about "the greater good" is actually adversarial and discriminatory when it comes to singling out unvaccinated children, whose parents may have legitimate reasons for refusing to vaccinate them.

"You cannot say that one child's life is more important than another's," she said.

Health officials say the policy is not the only method through which they can push parents to vaccinate.

"A growing number of pediatric groups simply will not see patients unless they are vaccinated," said Bev Fulbright, epidemiology manager at the county health department. "That can be a huge influence."

And Schaffner wants vaccine education to become more standardized in schools, so parenthood is not the first time people are exposed to the questions surrounding it.

"Kids don't learn about vaccines and the illnesses they prevent because, well, we've eliminated those diseases," he said. "We need to keep it that way."
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More parents are refusing to vaccinate their kids. Doctors say they want stricter laws Empty
PostSubject: Re: More parents are refusing to vaccinate their kids. Doctors say they want stricter laws   More parents are refusing to vaccinate their kids. Doctors say they want stricter laws Icon_minitimeSun Apr 19, 2015 10:42 am

I agree with having stricter laws. I understand that some religions are very against it, in those cases the religion should be taken into consideration. For some they believe that they won't receive an eternal after life if the body is altered or isn't kept "kosher" and vaccines go into that category. What they need to do is make parents provide more proof and documentation of their beliefs to become exempt, anyone can say that it goes against their religious beliefs just to get out of something.

Children should learn about the diseases in health class at school, they teach sex ed and about stds, they need to touch more on diseases and what they do in bio or health, not just the ones people receive vaccines for but also cancers, diabetes and others. Kids should know about any means to prevent something but also be aware of symptoms for stuff so that they understand their bodies more.

As for making stricter laws, I'm all for it. Schools should have stricter rules when it comes to vaccines.

As for this statement: "You cannot say that one child's life is more important than another's," She is just twisting stuff to fit her own ideas. They aren't saying that one person's life is more valuable then anthers. This is about protecting children who have allergies to the actual vaccine, has a disease such as cancer and cannot receive the vaccine and protecting babies and children who are too young to get the vaccines or haven't completed all of their doses. In my opinion it is the people who make comments such as this who are selfish and believe that their child/children's lives are superior to other's because they are putting other people at risk because they don't want their kids to get the immunizations.
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