What gaslighting!
I have never heard of anyone refusing the above named vaccines, they are solid vaccines that passed the rigours of testing and safety trials
with flying colours....unlike this poisonous mrna shit
Got lah.
Maybe not in SG.
But USA and North America a lot.
https://pha.berkeley.edu/2019/12/01/americas-measles-crisis-amid-the-anti-vaccine-movement/
he measles vaccine has saved millions of lives since its introduction in the 1960s. The spread of misinformation puts this progress in jeopardy.
In 2000, the CDC announced measles was eliminated in the United States due to a strong vaccination program and school mandates. Fast forward to November 2019, and we now have over 1,250 confirmed cases of measles since the beginning of this year, the greatest number of cases in the U.S. since 1994.
The prevalent anti-vaccination movement and other factors are partly to blame. Measles is the most transmissible virus known to man, with a high potential to be life-threatening. It is a human airborne disease, meaning it can be spread simply through coughing and sneezing and can remain suspended in the air for up to two hours. Currently, two doses of the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine is 97 percent effective against measles, making it the most powerful vaccine against any pathogen.
Before the measles vaccine was introduced in the 1960s, two to three million deaths occurred globally each year. Despite these statistics, many people today have been under the incorrect impression that it is a trivial disease, contributing to the anti-vaccination movement. This is due to the fact that most people have never witnessed the debilitating and deadly diseases that vaccines protect against. Another contributing factor is the vast spread of misinformation through unreliable media outlets.
This is not a problem of biomedical research, but rather a public health awareness crisis. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases who has made significant contributions to HIV/AIDS research and has developed therapies for formerly fatal diseases such as polyarteritis nodosa, weighed in on this issue. He explains that when the level of vaccinations in a community falls below a certain critical level, a phenomenon known as herd immunity weakens.
Fauci best describes strong herd immunity as “even if someone enters into the community who is measles infected, the measles virus will have little opportunity to spread because most of the community is already vaccinated.” In a community, there are certain people with immunodeficiencies who cannot get vaccinated, thus making them highly vulnerable to diseases such as measles. The herd, which is the vaccinated population, protect the vulnerable ones from the spread of the virus. Approximately 93 to 95 percent of the population needs to be vaccinated in order to create an umbrella of protection for this particular disease. Furthermore, since measles is seen throughout the world, we constantly have Americans traveling and bringing back measles into the U.S., making herd immunity critical.
A weakness in herd immunity contributed to the recent measles outbreak in the Orthodox Jewish community in Brooklyn, New York. The level of vaccination in that community was down to about 70 to 80 percent, well below the critical level of herd immunity, which was due to the spread of misinformation about the safety of the MMR vaccine among other causes. A child who had visited relatives abroad brought measles back into his neighborhood in Brooklyn, causing one of the worst measles outbreaks that New York City has seen in decades. A total of 654 individuals were infected, causing the city to issue a mandatory vaccination in people living in the four Brooklyn neighborhoods. This led to New York lawmakers creating a new state law in June, which revoked parents’ abilities to refuse immunizations based on religious reasons.
Failures in public health education and communication, the rise of the anti-vax movement, and even the declining measles rate as a result of previous measles vaccination success have contributed to more outbreaks. One of the main concerns of vaccination skeptics is the fear that the MMR vaccine is linked to autism. However, this link is a falsehood that has been debunked multiple times by the CDC and other health professionals. Despite this, Fauci states that the movement continues to exist because of the spread of misinformation through social media and extreme libertarianism. Health departments face the challenge of respecting individual rights and safeguarding the public welfare; therefore, many states allow immunization exemptions for religious and philosophical reasons. The problem with this “opt-out” system is that all parents have to do is simply check a box indicating they do not want their child to receive vaccinations.
As UC Berkeley students, we can help combat this issue by simply spreading knowledge in daily social discourse. Nowadays, information is spread mostly through social media and many people do not fully evaluate the validity of internet articles. It is important to encourage media outlets to prioritize their search results. For example, Pinterest has taken down inaccurate content about immunizations on its platform, and Facebook has introduced a pop-up window connecting the user to the CDC or WHO when searching for vaccine-related content. Truth and evidence-based decision-making are integral to how many of us think; for that reason, we can promote the importance of vaccinations in discussions and social media when the topic comes up. We do not need a better vaccine, says Fauci. We just need people to get vaccinated.
https://www.ctvnews.ca/health/anti-vaxxer-views-blamed-as-measles-deaths-rise-15-per-cent-1.4717303
HEALTH| News
Anti-vaxxer views blamed as measles deaths rise 15 per cent
AFPStaff
Contact
Published Thursday, December 5, 2019 4:49PM EST
Volume 90%
CTV National News: Measles' deadly surge
NOW PLAYING
A deadly outbreak of the measles has shut down Samoa, but not before it claimed 60 lives, most of them children. Tom Walters reports.
SHARE:
Share
1
Reddit
WASHINGTON -- More than 140,000 people died from measles worldwide in 2018,
the World Health Organization (WHO) and U.S. authorities said Thursday, the result of global vaccination rates that have stagnated for almost a decade.
Poorer countries were hardest hit, with the vast majority of measles cases and deaths in sub-Saharan Africa.
Wealthier countries however have also been battling their own outbreaks, with four European nations losing their "eliminated" status in 2018.
Related Stories
Related Links
The announcement came as the Pacific island nation of Samoa was locked down in order to carry out a mass vaccination drive to cope with an epidemic that has killed 62 and, according to UN officials, was fuelled by anti-vaxxer conspiracy theories on the internet.
"The fact that any child dies from a vaccine-preventable disease like measles is frankly an outrage and a collective failure to protect the world's most vulnerable children," said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreysus, director-general of the World Health Organization.
"To save lives, we must ensure everyone can benefit from vaccines - which means investing in immunization and quality health care as a right for all."
Most of the deaths occurred among children under the age of five. Babies and infants are at greatest risk of infection and of developing complications, including pneumonia and brain swelling that can lead to permanent damage, blindness or hearing loss.
About 142,300 people lost their lives to the disease in 2018 -- a quarter of the number of deaths in 2000, but up 15 per cent compared to 2017. There were 9.7 million total cases.
The WHO and UNICEF estimated that 86 per cent of children globally received the first dose of measles vaccine in 2018, but fewer than 70 per cent received the second recommended dose.
That is far short of the recommended 95 per cent vaccination coverage, with two doses of measles vaccine deemed necessary to protect populations from the disease.
The five worst affected countries, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Liberia, Madagascar, Somalia and Ukraine, accounted for half of all cases worldwide.
But the United States also saw its highest number of cases in 25 years, narrowly avoiding losing its status of having eliminated the disease. The status is lost if an outbreak is sustained continuously for more than a year.
Albania, the Czech Republic, Greece and the United Kingdom meanwhile all lost their eliminated status.
The rise comes as a growing anti-vaccine movement gains steam around the world, driven by fraudulent claims linking the MMR vaccine against measles, mumps and rubella to a risk of autism in children.
A recent study meanwhile showed that contracting the measles virus decimated the protective antibodies responsible for remembering previous encounters with disease: effectively wiping the host's immunity memory.