Imposing Your Ignorance on Your Children and Your Illness on Society –
The Selfish Americans Attack Again
No American parent of
young children today has any concept of the horror and tragedy of childhood
diseases. In the age before vaccinations
and anti-biotics a childhood disease
could be a death sentence. Today, because
of vaccinations childhood diseases are largely avoided, sparing children their lives
and parents unspeakable grief.
That of course
assumes that parents would see that their children are vaccinated. Actually that seems silly, what kind of
parent would not make certain their children are vaccinated, the vaccines are
safe and effective. But apparently there are some really bad
people out there who also happen to be parents.
These local
concentrations of unvaccinated children pose a growing risk to public health.
For the most common shots, vaccination rates for America
overall, and even California ,
are still above 90%, at or near the levels considered necessary to provide “herd
immunity” for a population. But in places the rates have been falling for
almost a decade. In many counties, towns and nursery schools—within Washington
state, Oregon, Vermont and California, especially—vaccination rates are now far
below the herd-immunity level.
And who are these rather despicable people?
In
some pockets, such as the rural foothills of California ’s
Sierra Nevada , they may belong to the
conservative don’t-tread-on-me crowd that distrusts all government
recommendations simply because they come from the government. In others, such
as the liberal organic-food-and-yoga belt along the coast, parents may forswear
vaccines because they see the shots as dangerous, and the diseases they protect
against as mild.
And what is the impact of their behavior?
These
local concentrations of unvaccinated children pose a growing risk to public
health. For the most common shots, vaccination rates for America overall, and even California , are still above 90%, at or near
the levels considered necessary to provide “herd immunity” for a population.
But in places the rates have been falling for almost a decade. In many
counties, towns and nursery schools—within Washington state, Oregon, Vermont
and California, especially—vaccination rates are now far below the herd-immunity
level.
This
trend, predictably, is leading to the resurgence of diseases considered
vanquished long ago. In 2010, for example, California had an outbreak of whooping
cough, which at its height put 455 babies in hospital and killed ten of them. Elsewhere
there have been outbreaks of measles.
So once again political and scientific ignorance is
trumping common sense and concern for others.
As for the argument that one should not get their children vaccinated,
well there is this.
The
case against vaccination, by contrast, is not clear. One view seems to be that
the diseases in question merely give you a rash and are a nuisance, whereas the
vaccines will make your child autistic. That particular myth, still peddled on
the internet, originated with Andrew Wakefield, a British doctor, who published
a paper in 1998 that suggested a link between the common MMR shot (against
measles, mumps and rubella) and autism. The paper has since been entirely
discredited, and Dr Wakefield censured.
And now we another example of the arrogance of
ignorance. And another example of how
selfish people inflict and infect the rest of society.
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