Photograph
from the 1950s before the widespread application
of the
anti-polio vaccine developed by Dr. Jonas Salk
On September 9th,
California enacted a new law that severely undercuts the ability of doctors to
grant medical exemptions to the state’s vaccination requirements for school-age
children. Doctors catering to parents with a strong belief that mandated
vaccinations are health-challenges that can create diseases like autism – a
scientifically disproven myth – can now face disciplinary review based on a
pattern of issuing too many such exemptions.
The summary of the new bill from the
Legislative Counsel tells us: “This
bill would require a parent or guardian, by January 1, 2021, to submit to the
department a copy of a medical exemption granted prior to that date for
inclusion in a state database in order for the medical exemption to remain
valid. The bill would require the department to annually review immunization
reports from schools and institutions to identify schools with an overall
immunization rate of less than 95%, physicians and surgeons who submitted 5 or
more medical exemption forms in a calendar year, and schools and institutions
that do not report immunization rates to the department. The bill would require
a clinically trained department staff member who is a physician and surgeon or
a registered nurse to review all medical exemption forms submitted meeting
those conditions. The bill would authorize the medical exemptions determined by
that staff member to be inappropriate or otherwise invalid to be reviewed by
the State Public Health Officer or a physician and surgeon designated by the
State Public Health Officer, and revoked by the State Public Health Officer or
physician and surgeon designee, under prescribed circumstances.”
Protestors in
the state capitol were loud and passionate. Six were arrested. The reaction of
the irate parents is well-summarized by this statement from one anonymous
protestor: “No one is listening, what does it take? I have pictures of injured
kids in my pocket.” Sponsoring
State Senator Richard Pan (himself a pediatrician) noted: “It is my hope
that parents whose vulnerable children could die from vaccine-preventable
diseases will be reassured that we are protecting those communities that have
been left vulnerable because a few unscrupulous doctors are undermining
community immunity by selling inappropriate medical exemptions.”
But the emphasis of today’s
blog is not the California experience but of what happens when mythology
overtakes common sense in this immunization battle. It is the story of the
nascent resurgence of an incurable and seriously debilitating disease (a
potential lifetime of paralysis or death): polio. “[The] virus can be stamped out
through regular doses of an oral vaccine. It was eliminated in the United
States four decades ago.
“The global effort [to eradicate
polio], which includes UNICEF, foreign donors and international charities, has
made huge strides from 2014, when nine countries recorded new infections… In
Pakistan, the door-to-door campaign to inoculate all children younger than 5
has been hampered by insecurity and lack of government authority in certain
areas. This year alone, five polio workers have been killed.
“Experts compared the struggle to
that of Nigeria, which was thought to have eliminated the virus until an
outbreak in 2016 in a state that had been overrun by the Boko Haram militant
group. Nigeria has not recorded a new polio case in three years and is on track
to be certified polio-free in 2020.” Los Angeles Times, September 13th.
Still, there is deep suspicion of
modern inoculation efforts, particularly in Pakistan and Afghanistan, often
linking greedy pharmaceutical companies that manufacture the vaccine to
political corruption to get governments to buy their products and implement
forced immunization. Especially in the most conservative Islamic communities.
Rumors that the polio vaccine can seriously harm a child and that getting polio
is lesser risk, false reporting of children seriously injured from the vaccine
alone, have placed village-level healthcare workers at great personal risk as
they try to convince locals to inoculate their children.
“Polio is making a troubling comeback
in Pakistan, and it is being driven by some of the same forces spreading
measles in the United States… Two years after health officials declared they
were on the verge of eradicating the crippling childhood disease from Pakistan,
one of the last countries where it remains endemic, at least 58 children here have
tested positive for the virus since January.
“That is nearly five times the total
of all of last year, and the most in a calendar year since 2014 — a major
setback for a $1-billion-a-year global eradication campaign… Some 2 million
Pakistani households have refused immunizations for children since April, when
reports circulated on television channels, Facebook and Twitter that children
had fallen ill after a vaccination drive at a school in the northern city of
Peshawar.
“None of those adverse reactions were
serious enough to require hospitalization, according to health officials. But
the rumors revived long-standing myths about the dangers of vaccinations in
Pakistan that the decades-long eradication effort has fought to dispel…
“Pakistani health officials have been
baffled by the idea that parents would risk exposing their children to the
virus in order to make a political statement… ‘It’s a joke,’ said a frustrated
Aziz Memon, national chairman of the PolioPlus program in Pakistan led by the
charity Rotary International. ‘But these are just blackmailing tactics. The
government is taking care of this in a serious way.’…
“Memon said the government has
replaced anti-polio officials in poor-performing districts and redoubled
efforts to win over tribal and religious leaders, some of whom have denounced
vaccinations as a Western plot to sterilize Muslims. At the request of
Pakistani officials, Facebook said it deleted 36 posts for spreading vaccine
misinformation ‘that had the potential to incite violence against health
workers on the ground.’” LA Times.
Anti-vax protestors cite religious
reasons (e.g., Islam vs Western Medicine), conspiracy theories, the right to
control their children’s bodies and provide Internet-driven false accusations
and fake photographs as tangible proof of the clear and present danger of
vaccinations. But inoculations tilt the balancing act between individual
freedom and a health threat to the millions of innocents around them who become
exposed to disease by reason of this purported “personal choice.” The greater
good, the overall health of us all, has to outweigh individual choice no matter
how passionate the plea.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and self-righteous indignation cannot work to expose an entire
community to an easily eradicated disease under a notion of “I’m right and
everyone else is wrong.”
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