Discussion:
Rwanda trounces Australia at immunisation
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Dan
2013-05-29 12:33:12 UTC
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http://skep.li/158kYPf WTF!

May 30, 2013
Rachel Browne and Vince Chadwick

A global report into the health and welfare of the world's children has
found Australian immunisation rates are lower than those of many
developing countries, including Rwanda, Eritrea and Bangladesh.

Disability is the focus of UNICEF's State of the World's Children 2013
report, which examines a broad range of areas such as health, education
and child protection in almost 200 countries.

Australia compares unfavourably to many countries on immunisation.

Immunisation coverage in Australia is 94 per cent for measles and 92 per
cent for diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, polio and Hib, which
causes infant meningitis.

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This puts it behind countries such as Bangladesh, which has comparable
coverage rates of between 96-99 per cent, Eritrea with 99 per cent and
Rwanda, which has rates between 93-98 per cent.

While Australia's vaccination rate for measles is higher than the global
average of 85 per cent, it is below the east Asia-Pacific average of 95
per cent.

There have been mass immunisation campaigns in developing countries,
sponsored by philanthropic organisations such as the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation.

David Durrheim, professor of public health medicine at the University of
Newcastle, said Australians were taking widespread immunity for granted.

''Because we are rarely confronted with the horror of these diseases,
our community may be becoming complacent,'' he said. ''This is dangerous
as unless high levels of vaccination are continually maintained,
susceptible children will be placed at the risk of preventable disease
and deaths.''

Developing countries are using vaccination as a widespread means of
controlling disease outbreaks.

''Some developing countries with weaker primary healthcare systems make
very effective use of mass-immunisation campaigns to vaccinate hard-to-
reach children, and if these campaigns are well planned then high
coverage is achieved,'' Dr Durrheim said.

The report, to be released in Vietnam on Thursday, comes days after the
NSW government moved to force parents to vaccinate their children or
register for an exemption to enrol them for childcare.

Victorian Health Minister David Davis is awaiting the advice of an
expert panel he convened earlier this month before considering any
initiatives. At present, the vaccination status of all Victorian
children must be reported to their childcare centre or school. When an
outbreak occurs, those who are not vaccinated are banned from attending
for a time.

Claire, from Melbourne, researched both sides of the debate, deciding
not to vaccinate her children, aged four, seven and 10. ''You are damned
if you do and damned if you don't,'' she said. ''I think the risks with
immunising are scarier than the risks of not immunising.'' She said she
may consider immunisation in the case of a disease outbreak, but did not
believe the diseases vaccinated against in Australia justified the risk
of immunising her children.
John H. Gohde
2013-05-29 13:32:27 UTC
Permalink
http://skep.li/158kYPfWTF!
May 30, 2013
Rachel Browne and Vince Chadwick
A global report into the health and welfare of the world's children has
found Australian immunisation rates are lower than those of many
developing countries, including Rwanda, Eritrea and Bangladesh.
Disability is the focus of UNICEF's State of the World's Children 2013
report, which examines a broad range of areas such as health, education
and child protection in almost 200 countries.
Tell me another tall tale.

My how the Science Psychos just love to kill and maim people with
their vaccination crap which is clearly ineffective at best using the
CDC's own data, or extremely dangerous at worst.

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