Vaccination is a fundamental part of a healthy and functional society. The CDC or Centers for Disease Control published its list of "Ten Great Public Achievements" for the United States from 1900-1990 and number one on the list was vaccination. Vaccines have been able to exterminate the smallpox virus worldwide (Swendiman 1). Smallpox was a fatal disease that pillaged many countries all over the world and killed thousands of people. Recently many people have been choosing not to vaccinate their children but science has proven that receiving vaccines early is the most effective way to prevent diseases large and small (Shah 1). If the public started implementing programs to help improve parental knowledge about the reasons for routine …show more content…
Children should get the DTaP vaccine, which is three vaccines in one (Childhood Vaccines 1). It will help protect against diphtheria, pertussis, and tetanus. Diphtheria attacks the throat and heart and usually leads to heart failure and death. Pertussis is more commonly known as whooping cough, due to the severe cough that causes things like breathing, eating, and drinking to become difficult. This can then lead to pneumonia, brain damage or death, especially in young children. Pertussis was actually the leading cause of death for infants until they introduced the vaccine (Childhood Vaccines 1). Children should also receive the TDaP vaccine, which is the booster for the DTaP vaccine to guarantee longer protection. Children should also receive the OPV or oral poliovirus vaccine that will help prevent polio. Polio is a disease that causes relentless muscle pain and paralysis of one or both arms and legs. The disease will eventually lead to paralyzation of the muscles used to breathe and swallow which will cause death (Childhood Vaccines 1). Another vaccine children should receive is the MMR vaccine that protects against the measles, mumps, and rubella. Measles causes a high fever, rash, cough, and a runny nose that will last up to two weeks. It doesn 't sound deadly, but it could lead to many different types of infections and pneumonia, which could
Polio, mumps, and diphtheria are a few of the diseases that have killed numerous amounts of people in the past. Yet, in today’s time, they are diseases people rarely hear about others dying from unless they are discussing the past. The reason for this is modern day vaccinations. Vaccinations are shots that help prevent against certain diseases. Vaccinations not only prevent diseases, but can also cause them to become nearly extinct in treated areas. One example of this would be the small pox vaccine, people were dying from this disease every day, and now you rarely, if ever, hear people talk about it. Although these vaccines are lifesaving, parents are becoming reluctant to provide these treatments for their children. For this reason, all children should be required to get particular vaccinations, unless they have certain medical conditions.
There are many people today who do not understand or consider the importance of vaccines for themselves, their children, or their loved ones. Many do not take into account that immunizations can save a life as they can be protected from diseases that could have once killed thousands of children. Vaccinations are very safe and effective. They are under careful review by scientists and doctors and are only provided to children if they are positively safe and effective. Vaccinations can protect future generations as they have and will continue to eliminate diseases that were severely detrimental to mankind just generations ago. Our generation needs to gain more knowledge of the benefits of vaccines to make
According to the Encyclopedia of Family Health, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention declared vaccinations to be one of the top on the list of 10 great public health achievements of the 20th century. Vaccinations have been extremely successful in eliminating and containing many deadly diseases, such as smallpox and polio, by providing the public with immunizations to keep themselves healthy against these very scary and potentially fatal illnesses. Mandated vaccinations for children in the United States has remained a highly debated topic as many ague the freedoms of these children and their parents is being compromised by the notion of mandated immunizations and vaccinations to attend
Mothers who are vaccinated are protecting their unborn children from viruses that could cause birth defects. Protecting future generations is vital in order to try and exterminate disease. The dangers of not vaccinating include exposing the individual child to disease, and also exposing other vulnerable people who may have compromised immune systems or not are eligible for vaccination. By receiving a vaccination you are limiting a future outbreak. Disease has been a problem for as long as mankind has been around. By making vaccinations mandatory for schools in every state we as a whole will be much healthier and less likely to get sick. 93% of children between the ages of 19-35 months have gotten the vaccine for Polio and the causes for that disease have decreased by 99%. In today’s world our medicine and science is getting much better. One of the first vaccines created was for smallpox. A man named Edward Jenner discovered that by taking the right amount of the live virus cowpox (vaccinia) and injecting it into his patients they did not catch smallpox. Like most things, the right dosage of a vaccine can prevent people from getting sick. The fact that vaccines have nearly gotten rid of some deadly diseases is a reason why getting vaccinated is important. With better education and information, people who choose not to vaccinate their children can be encouraged to consider vaccination, which will benefit both their families and society as a whole.
The discovery of vaccines prevented the spread of infectious diseases around the world. Vaccines control the spread of diseases such as measles, tuberculosis, smallpox, and the flu. In addition, vaccines increase the overall health of not only individuals, but of populations. Although these benefits prove effective on the world wide scale, the requirement of vaccinations of children to enter the public school system remains a current public health concern. Some argue that vaccines are dangerous for children and can lead to adverse effects. Others assert that the enforcement of requiring children to be vaccinated before entering schools protects the health of those attending school. These views create a challenge amongst parents who must
Throughout time many people on this planet have depended on vaccinations to be maintain a healthy lifestyle. Although vaccinations can fight off disease they can also affect kids in negative ways. There are also parents who depend on certain vaccinations too much which can cause more problems in the long run. As the amount of kids who are not vaccinated grows, the amount of diseases that were once wiped away start to return. When kids are born they are right away taken to get vaccinations. One of the reasons that young kids need more vaccinations is because kids have weaker immune systems. Whether people decide to vaccinate their children depends on certain factors like, income, ethnicity, and religion. There are many people who choose not to vaccinate their kids. This can either affect the young kid in a positive or negative way. Today certain states are responsible for the overall care of others and require people to get vaccinated. In many cases parents are required to vaccinate their kids before they enter grade school or child care centers. This idea can be good and bad in many ways. For one it requires all kids to be vaccinated for viruses which would eliminate the diseases that exist in kids. Some people might state that requiring children to be vaccinated before entering school would eliminate a family 's freedom of speech by having kids vaccinated against parent’s will. In some cases families can refuse to get kids vaccinated because of religious beliefs. Starting
If parents were to stop vaccinating their children then outbreaks of diseases would start happening again. For example, Japan’s citizens stopped giving their children the whooping cough vaccines because false rumors that the vaccine causes illness spread across the country. In 1975, only ten percent of Japan’s infants received the vaccine; because of this over thirteen-thousand cases of pertussis ( whooping cough) appeared and over forty-one deaths occurred (CDC). if Japan would have made the pertussis vaccine mandatory then the amount of whooping cough cases would have decreased because the parents would have continued to give their children the vaccine and then the forty-one children most likely would not have died. America should make vaccines mandatory before the parents of the U.S stop vaccinating their kids and outbreaks start to occur. If everyone were properly vaccinated than medical officials could eradicate detrimental diseases. It is estimated that because smallpox was eradicated that five million lives are saved a year. (UNICEF) Polio is on its way to being eradicated with eighty-percent of the world being vaccinated. (CDC) If vaccines are mandatory then everybody will be vaccinated which will lead to complete elimination of the disease. If the vaccines are administered properly to everyone on earth, than sixteen million lives would be saved in this year alone. By expunging theses diseases, we are
Vaccinating children has become an issue many parents are taking personally and debating on a regular basis. Several parents vaccinate their children, but do they really know what they are vaccinating for? Most vaccines are necessary for children to gain immunity. Immunity from severe diseases that are part of our history, such as: Measles, Polio, Pertussis, and Diphtheria are essential to everyone. Vaccinating for these serious diseases is a must to keep children healthy. However, history of the vaccine issue has been an ongoing topic for many years. But, most parents have not questioned vaccines until recently. The issue has changed over time since people have become more easily persuaded against vaccines. This has parents wondering how effective they really are, and if they are safe enough to distribute to children. Not to mention, the childhood diseases in question have not been around in decades. Parents want to understand the importance of prevention in something thought to be long gone. Above all, the importance of vaccines is significant in this country, and to all who live here. Furthermore, avoiding vaccines will leave the United States vulnerable to serious diseases, in which were once eradicated. Vaccinations are crucial to the regulation and the annihilation of fatal infectious diseases, not to just the child receiving the vaccine, but to all in the community. Thus, vaccinations should be mandated for all children in the U.S.
In the United States, vaccines are estimated to save 42,000 Americans each year from harmful diseases. Vaccines have been around for about 1,000 years and parents have disputed whether or not vaccinations should be mandatory or their own personal decision. Some parents believe that without vaccinations other children and adults are putting others at risk for diseases. But some parents disagree and think that they simply don’t do anything to help prevent diseases.
A world without vaccinated children would be a very bad and very dangerous world. Not vaccinating children can be very dangerous and could even cause the death of an innocent child, whose parent made the decision to not vaccinate their child due to lack of education about vaccines. This has been a very controversial issue in the united states for a very long time and it is times for a change on the way parents think about vaccines and people need to work together to get vaccines to become a normal thing parents do for their children. Vaccines should be mandatory in the United States because it would insure the health of children in the U.S. , vaccines do more good than they do harm, and vaccines protect other people from contracting
the top on the list of 10 great public health achievements of the 20th century (Jackson 643). Vaccinations have been extremely successful in eliminating and containing many deadly diseases, such as smallpox and polio, by providing the public with immunizations to keep themselves healthy against these very scary and potentially fatal illnesses. Mandated vaccinations for children in the united states has remained a highly debated and hot topic as many argue the freedoms of these children and their parents is being compromised by the notion of mandated immunizations and vaccinations to attend public and private schools. The founding documents of our country support these feelings, but many disagree as the greater good of the public would be largely at stake if exposed to a possible risk of contagion due to a preventable human to human transmittable disease. Vaccinations are mandated by school districts in every state as a method to protect the children, and the public as a whole when statistics show 100% effective elimination of certain diseases like smallpox. Many believe that vaccinations are responsible for eliminating these deadly diseases, while opposing views believe that better sanitation, hygiene, and the introduction of antibiotics is solely responsible for containing these outbreaks. Why would parents choose not to vaccinate and protect their children? Though there is evidence that supports both of these perspectives, there is a factor that remains untouched, the
It is not the question of whether or not it could be done, but should it be done, which individuals never ask. Ever since modern science brought the ability to prevent catastrophic diseases through the use of vaccinations, a question has existed. The question of whether or not vaccinations should be required has lingered throughout society for many years. Vaccinations have prevented outbreaks of many diseases and saved countless lives. Many individuals and groups claim vaccinations are linked to autism; however, no scientific evidence has been found to support this claim. Vaccinations are proven to be extremely safe and effective. Parents who decide to not vaccinate their kids are putting their children’s lives at huge risk. Not vaccinating children is the same as letting children smoke, it opens the children up to many diseases and consequences. Smoking increases the risks of lung cancer and cardiovascular disease. Not vaccinating
Can you imagine life without vaccine? In the reading "Not Being Vaccinated is not Acceptable" by David Ropeik argues that we should all get vaccinated because it’s necessary. Vaccinations are designed to help us go through our daily everyday life. A vaccine is a modern type of medicine that has been added to the world early on in life to prevent us all from diseases. It is called a modern medicine because of how many lives it has saved throughout the world. The earliest documented examples of vaccination are in the 17th century from India and China, people infected with smallpox were used to protect against the diseases. Vaccine have become better, to where they are safer for the human body. Vaccinations protect you and everyone around you, saves public money, protects future generations and it’s reliable.
The first vaccination for smallpox was discovered in 1796 by Edward Jenner; since then there have been arguments over the morality, ethics, effectiveness, and safety of all vaccinations. A vaccination is a killed or weakened organism that is used to create immunity that protects you from a particular disease without causing the suffering from the disease itself. Immunizations have saved more than a billon lives and protected civilians in the United States from life threatening diseases. During the 20th century the life expectancy in the United States has increased largely due to immunizations and also reducing the mortality rate of infectious diseases (Healthy People 2020, 2014, p.1). In today’s society there has been skepticism among parents with vaccinating their children. Although there is no scientific discovery, parents have an idea that injecting a potential harmful substance may be linked to autism, SIDS, or other threatening side effects. Vaccinations are not mandatory in the United States, people have the right to choose, but outbreaks of preventable diseases will occur when numerous parents decide not to vaccinate their children. According to the CDC, vaccine-preventable diseases are still a threat to our society (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC], 2016, p.1). Outbreaks of measles, mumps, and whopping cough have been reported since 2001 and continue to infect children in the U.S.
In contrast, a positive aspect of many people having vaccinations is herd immunity. Herd immunity is the occurrence where a large proportion of a specific population is vaccinated to provide them immunity, and as a result, it also gives some protection to the people of the population who have and yet developed immunity. This happens as the a large group of vaccinated individuals are protected from a virus and creates difficulty for the it to spread because there is only a small percentage of the population left that could be infected by the disease. It is a very crucial aspect of immunity for the community as the people who cannot receive vaccinations (i.e. people with weak immune systems, very young children and patients who are too ill)