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February 8, 2007
UPDATE: To vaccinate or not to vaccinate, that is the question
The debate continues to simmer over Texas's mandatory HPV vaccination, with this article in today's USA Today. BoardBuzz told you earlier this week about the mandate in Texas and pending legislation in other 23 states and the District of Columbia.
The article notes that a group called Concerned Women for America "believes that it is the right and responsibility of parents--not government--to choose whether or not their daughter receives the vaccination." But as we noted before, the Texas order allows for an opt out, as do the pending mandates in every state except Mississippi and West Virginia. And even some in the health community are weighing in against a mandate:
By rushing to mandate HPV immunization, says Samuel Katz, a co-developer of the measles vaccine, "you just throw oil on the flames of the anti-vaccine folks." The measles vaccine, licensed in 1963, launched the debate about mandating immunizations, Katz, pediatrics professor emeritus at Duke University, said Wednesday. But HPV isn't the measles, he says. "It isn't transmitted in a classroom to dozens of children. It's not the same thing as infectious diseases that fly through the air with no boundaries."
There is still much to be learned about the proper use of the HPV vaccine, Katz says. "When you start with a new vaccine, you have to go through a period of public education, as well as health-worker education," Katz says. "I think eventually this (HPV immunization) will spread to the population at large, but I don't think the way to get there is to mandate."
But the debate does have two sides, and the article quotes, "Mark Einstein, director of clinical research for gynecological oncology at Montefiore Medical Center in New York, believes it should be mandated, but 'we weren't expecting anything to happen so soon.' With more education, he says, 'people will realize this is just another method' to prevent cervical cancer."
So, what's a girl to do? Weigh in with a comment.
Posted February 8, 2007 12:09 PM |
Health & Wellness
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