A young mother noted “it is God’s will if my child dies from measles or other infectious disease, but I will not forgive myself if my child gets Autism after I allow him to be vaccinate. I will feel that I did not protect my child from the harmful effects of the MMR vaccine.” This religious believe about disease and fate seems to be a recurrent theme in the participants’ response and many believe the MMR vaccine is different because they are letting their children to receive a harmful vaccine, which they noted will hang in their consciousness, if it harms their child.
Lack of Culturally Competent Health Care Providers
Most of the participants noted lack of culturally competent physicians/nurses that can connect with the parents and address
For years there has been public controversies over the advancements in science and all of the health risks that have been around, but now the use of the media has certainly boosted the amount of confusion throughout the public. Frightening stories regarding the progressions of science have been appearing online and in print. One particular example of this issue was the MMR vaccine debate. The MMR vaccine is an immunization vaccine which fights against rubella, measles, and mumps. During the 1990’s the media played a huge role in the decisions parents made regarding whether or not they allowed their children to get vaccinated. The media portrayed the MMR vaccine as having a possible link between autism. Which left the public worried about the MMR vaccine and having conflicting views and feelings towards the safety of vaccinations. In the MMR vaccine debate scientist and the media played two different roles which helped citizens make decisions regarding vaccination.
The topic of childhood vaccinations and the dangers that accompany them has been a topic of controversy in contemporary times. At the near edge of the twenty-first century, a man named Doctor Andrew Wakefield released a study which created a mass uproar in both parents and health professionals alike. Parents were panicked as to whether or not they should have their young child vaccinated (in fear of their acquiring autism), and health professionals fearful that the population percentage of people acquiring measles, mumps, or rubella (for it was the M.M.R. vaccination that the parents feared in particular) would rise to a number which would lead to a mass risk of disease. Despite Wakefields’ study, the truth persists in all types of experiments related to vaccination. Whether being tested in a replication of Wakefields’ study or in any other, vaccines have been proven to work at preventing disease and display no causation of autism.
Vaccinations are highly considered and one of the greatest medical accomplishments of modern civilization. Childhood diseases that were common back then are now increasingly strange because of the vaccinations that we have today. The overwhelming effectiveness of these vaccinations may lead individuals to reject the benefits they may have and are more focused and concerned of the risk and the side effects they may cause to someone. Today ill be focusing on the Tetanus and Diphtheria vaccine also known as the T.D shot, the flu shot, and the Human papillomavirus vaccine also known as HPV. I will also be addressing different issues about vaccine safety and the history behind mandatory vaccines.
Vaccinations have been saving over 6 million lives since Edward Jenner created the smallpox vaccine in 1796 (Immunisation Advisory Centre). Today without vaccines we would be living in a very different world that would be struck with disease, but now this is becoming a reality for some religious and allergenic communities. On NPR an interview was conducted during “Science Friday, Talk of the Nation” with special guest, Dr. Offit, an author of the book "Deadly Choices: How the Anti-Vaccine Movement Threatens Us All." He stressed the importance of vaccines on the show (https://www.npr.org/2011/01/07/132740175/paul-offit-on-the-anti-vaccine-movement)
Vaccines are widely considered as the safest and most effective method of promoting public health and saving lives. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) recommends receiving 31 doses of 10 vaccines (in addition to a yearly flu shot after six months of age) for children ranging from birth to 6 years old. Although all 50 states require children entering public school to be vaccinated against certain diseases there are no US federal laws that mandate vaccination. According to the Nation Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) all school immunization laws grant medical exemptions for vaccination and 48 states grant religious or philosophical exemptions. Those that advocate for vaccination say that it is safe and one of the greatest medical achievements
Some people say that people don’t take action to situation until something happens to them, then that is when they realize there is a problem and they try to fix it. It might be too late then. Vaccinations is a very controversial topic to many parents. Some parents think it is not necessary to vaccinate their children. Either because they believe it is unsafe to do so or it goes against their religious beliefs. Injecting a substance into a body of a child can alarm many parents but many of these vaccines have been applied to many patients and it was effective. Although these vaccines have been proven to work parents are still against vaccinating their kids. They wait until they see that their child does have to be vaccinated after they realized
Culture can be defined as “language, ideas, beliefs, customs, taboos, codes, institutions, tools, techniques, works of art, rituals, ceremonies, and symbols” (Merriam-Webster, 2014). The United States is currently experiencing a dramatic change regarding cultural diversity. According to a recent census, 36.3 percent of the United States population belongs to an ethnic or racial minority (U.S. Census Bureau, 2010). Increased immigration from around the world is continually adding to the numbers of our already culturally diverse nation. However, despite a marked increase in life expectancy, a decrease in infant mortality, and other health care improvements, many minority groups still experience poorer access to heal care. It should be the goal of every health care worker, especially nurses, to do all that is in their power to not only culturally congruent care but also to attempt to eliminate these health care related disparities.
Have you ever been sick before? If so, you know that the symptoms make you feel horrible most of the time. Well imagine back in the olden days when people were dying of smallpox, tuberculosis, and many other illnesses. However, vaccinations were created to try and prevent problems like these. And vaccinations have definitely contributed to the generally healthy population of people in the US and other countries. Based on my research, it is obvious that vaccination is the invention that has the biggest impact on humanity. I believe that my claim is accurate because vaccines benefit people by curing many sick humans, saving lives, and wiping out some diseases altogether.
Americans are on fire over a hot topic controversy regarding vaccinations – “to vaccinate, or not to vaccinate?” More specifically, people are vividly debating whether or not children should receive the MMR vaccine. The injection itself was created in order to prevent infection of measles, mumps, and rubella - all of which are viruses that cause serious illnesses, and even death. Several thousand people in the United States, commonly referred to as “anti-vaxxers,” are choosing to defer the vaccination of their children because they believe it causes more harm than good. Two main speculations sparking the MMR debate are the accusation that it causes autism and has side effects that are far more negative than the benefit of immunity. Despite these accusations, the MMR vaccine is, without a doubt, providing resistance to illnesses that can lead to death. Therefore, Americans should continue to vaccinate their children with the MMR.
Ninety present of individuals who come into contact with a measles affected individual will contract the viral disease. Would you want that happening to you or your family? The Measles, Mumps, Rubella vaccine, commonly known as the MMR vaccine, is one of the most imperative vaccines offered because it is 97% effective at helping to protect individuals from a disease that kills 146,000 people globally each year—which equals about 400 deaths every day or about 17 deaths every hour (CDC, “Measles Vaccination”). The first dose of this vaccine should be administered at twelve months. Yet, some individuals do not choose to be immunized, claiming that vaccinations are against their religious
Dr. Edward Jenner created the first vaccine in 1796 creating one of the most successful public health inventions in history. They have caused decreases in both deadly disease cases and deaths as the list of preventable diseases continues to grow. However, Great Britain has experienced a decline in the childhood inoculation because of the portrayal of vaccines in the media. Mass media has significant ability to influence public opinion since for much of the layman population they are the primary source of scientific information. In the case of the MMR vaccine, the media induced a response opposite to those supported by empirical evidence. In the 1990s, despite the scientific evidence that there was no correlation between autism and the MMR
Vaccines inhibit or abate infections. They are intended to prompt a defensive immune reaction in the host against the viruses existing in the vaccine. When inoculated, the immune system of the host emits a specific response, involving particular T-cells and antibodies that can resist infection when they are exposed to a virus. Essentially, vaccination is the frontrunner to the induction of a specific immunological memory against the viruses presented in the vaccine when an individual is inoculated. When the immune system has already interacted with the beforehand virus it is able to mount a specific response much more rapidly than the non-primed immune system.
21st century contains lots and lots of diseases that some people can’t be protected from. But with the right vaccination lots of people lives can be saved. If an unvaccinated child gets exposed the child's body might not be able to fight off the disease; before vaccinations children died from diseases that vaccines now protect. Vaccines help reduce the risk of infection by working with the body’s to immunity. Vaccines are what the disease itself is apart of;l it’s like having the disease but only a portion of it inside of your body. This happens so that your body is familiar to the disease itself, and this helps the immune system fight off the disease when you come in contact with it. Example( Flu) it occurs during the cold half of the year;
In 1963 the Noble Peace Prize winning virologist John F. Enders finally licensed his vaccine for measles. Prior to this vaccine the United States alone reported 4 million cases of the measles each year. With more scientific discoveries the measles vaccine today has evolved to include immunity against rubella and mumps along with protecting millions against illness each year. However, vaccination is a word surrounded by controversy in today’s parenting world and the Measles Mumps and Rubella vaccine (MMR) can be distinguished as possibly the most controversial vaccine of our time. Controversial because of the fear that many have that it causes autism along with other hazards. This fear has clouded
Vaccines; a more than spectacular development of science which has prevented countless numbers of diseases by giving one’s body an immunity to a microorganism by stimulating the body’s immune system and giving it the ability to recognize the pathogen as it enters the body to be more easily and readily destroyed. Autism, on the other hand, has not yet been fully linked back to a specific cause or reason. Because of this uncertainty, disgruntled parents have chosen to believe ideas with no scientific backing behind them besides what discredited scientist Wakefield said in a paper linking the MMR vaccine to autism along with some celebrities following Jenny McCarthy’s Anti-Vaccination Movement.