Using death rates occurring in developing nations to motivate people in developed nations to vaccinate is fear mongering, pure and simple. - SM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/health/newsid_1514000/1514690.stm
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Wednesday, 29 August, 2001, 10:20 GMT 11:20 UK The
case for vaccination
Babies get routine vaccines against a variety of diseases A
survey for BBC Radio 4's Today programme has found that three-quarters of
parents think the MMR vaccine was safe. But publicity about MMR may have
undermined public confidence about vaccination in general. A few doctors fear an overuse of
vaccines, even the majority believe vaccination is the key to keeping former
childhood killer diseases at bay. Long forgotten diseases are "waiting
in the wings" to re-emerge and infect the world warns one health expert.
Dr John Clements, of the World Health
Organisation, warns that failing to vaccinate children against a host of
diseases will put children in Britain and the rest of the world at risk. He said: "All the childhood diseases
are waiting in the wings, just off stage and are waiting to run in
again." Dr Clements said that although better
health and social conditions had cut the numbers of death from diseases like
diphtheria, that it wasn't until a vaccination programme was introduced that
the disease became virtually unheard of in the UK.
Protecting children He stressed that not vaccinating children
could have a global impact and that in many countries parents would love to
have the vaccine to protect their children like the UK. "Vaccinations save millions of lives a
year and it is certainly not true that children stopped dying of measles
before the vaccine came in the vast majority of countries in the world. "Indeed there are still about a
million deaths occurring from measles simply because we cannot get the
vaccine to them. "I don't think if we asked a mother in
Uganda if she wanted her child immunised against measles she would have a
moments hesitation, because she would know there was a good chance it would
die otherwise." Natural immunity But Dr Jane Donegan, a GP and homeopath,
said she personally believes strongly against vaccination, believing that
children should build up their own immunity to disease. She questioned the strength of the link
between falling incidence of diseases such as measles in the UK, and the
introduction of vaccines. She said a child's system should not be
overloaded by potentially harmful vaccines. "We have to look at the possibility of
whether or not they have a harmful effect on the system." "We are told not to give babies
younger than six months citrus, nuts, wheat products and unmodified milk. Yet
at the age of two months in our current vaccination programme we actually
inject babies with vaccines which contain mercury, some of them, formaldehyde
and aluminium." |
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See
also: 29 Aug
01 | Health Internet links:
Top Health stories now: Reform calls after GP abuse scandal
Gene check could predict menopause
'Lost' driver dies outside hospital
Fears grow as mumps cases rise
Baby given accidental overdose
Criminal doctors: Can they be stopped?
Links
to more Health stories are at the foot of the page. |
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