CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“VACCINATION LAW TAKES EFFECT, BUT UNDER CHALLENGE"
As schools begin opening around
California, the state’s new vaccinate-or-stay-out-of-school policy ought to be
taking effect at last, more than 18 months after the December 2014 measles
outbreak at Disneyland that propelled it.
Under the new law, all students
entering kindergarten this fall must have had two measles shots, a mumps and
rubella (MMP) vaccination, their final doses of polio vaccine and a diphtheria,
tetanus and pertussis (whooping cough) injection.
Parents who don’t want to provide
these for their kids can home school their children, but unvaccinated kids who
may be carrying any of those once-dreaded diseases are no longer welcome in
kindergarten. That’s because unless 94 to 96 percent of children in any group
of 100 are vaccinated, there can be no guarantee against disease outbreaks.
The most recent California example of
what non-vaccination can bring came in Nevada County last March, when many
students at the Yuba River Charter School were kept out of classes more than a
week after an unvaccinated child was diagnosed with measles. Health officials
said the child was infectious while attending school. Classes were shut down
because only about 43 percent of kindergarten pupils entering the school in
fall 2015 had up-to-date vaccinations and an epidemic could have resulted.
Many of the other 57 percent in those
classrooms were exempted because of a “personal belief” provision written into
previous state law, allowing parents to claim vaccinations ran counter to their
religious beliefs. The new law, known as SB 277, allows exemptions only for
children medically unable to receive vaccines, with parents required to produce
a doctor’s note before getting that exemption.
Unvaccinated students admitted to
kindergarten in previous years will continue in school, however. When they
reach 7th grade, their parents will have to provide written evidence
of vaccination.
But foes of vaccination, who have long
insisted vaccines backfire and lead both to adverse reactions and more disease,
are not giving up their fight against the law. Their first move was trying to
qualify a referendum for this fall’s ballot aiming to overturn SB 277. They got
far too few signatures to qualify it for a vote.
So they’ve turned to a Superior Court
judge in San Diego County, seeking an injunction to suspend the law until
higher courts can rule on its constitutionality.
That move has also not yet succeeded.
But an initiative proposed for the November 2018 ballot aiming to overturn SB
277 remains alive, with a Sept. 26 deadline for gathering signatures.
Amid all this, there are no credible
denials of research showing that no more than 86 percent of those at Disneyland
had been vaccinated before the day many were exposed to measles. The actual
rate may have been as low as 50 percent, according to the Journal of the
American Medical Assn. Because the scientifically accepted vaccination level
for so-called “herd immunity” is at least 94 percent, there was ample
opportunity for infection and 145 cases were recorded among those at the theme
park and others who came in contact with them later.
“This is what happens when parents opt
out of vaccinations, as roughly half the cases occurred in children who were
not vaccinated but were eligible to receive the shots,” wrote Lila Abassi, MD,
director of medicine for the American Council on Science and Health.
Because some who have been vaccinated
can still contract measles when exposure is strong and direct, as they did at
Disneyland, most physicians consider “herd immunity” vital to disease
prevention.
Said Democratic state Sen. Richard
Pan, SB 277 author and the Legislature’s only practicing pediatrician, “It is
unfortunate there are still people who perpetuate misinformation about the
safety and efficacy of vaccines and minimize the dangers of vaccine-preventable
diseases that disabled and killed millions annually before vaccines were
available.”
The safety of vaccines has been proven
in myriad studies, and their efficacy is clear from the small incidence of
diseases like rubella and polio since vaccines for them were deployed.
But that doesn’t quiet nay-sayers any
more than photos from space deflated flat-earth advocates who still hold
occasional conventions. What’s important is that parents understand that
regardless of their personal preferences, they don’t have the right to expose
the children of others to potentially deadly ailments.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough,
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
No comments:
Post a Comment