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Anti Vaccination Research Paper

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The renowned Founding Father, Benjamin Franklin, once recalled a time when his four-year-old son perished untimely due to smallpox, “I long regretted bitterly, and still regret that I had not given it to him by inoculation…” Although vaccines now replace inoculation practices, Franklin’s repentance is a cautionary tale to those who believe there is an repressed hazard within vaccines and therefore, refuse them. Termed as “Anti-Vaxxers,” there lies a community that declines the preventative medicine for their families on account wariness of ingredients, danger, or risk of developing an adverse reaction caused by the vaccination. Sadly, Anti-Vaxxers often form excuses for avoiding vaccines, which the CDC or Center for Disease Control incessantly …show more content…

Children should be vaccinated because of all the advantages immunizations offer singularly, publicly, and worldwide. Children arguably benefit the most from vaccines. Because of a child’s lack of immune system, they could necessitate an outside influence or power to protect themselves against diseases like chickenpox, rubella, or other vaccine-preventable diseases. Currently, vaccines are a highly-effective and authentic option for offering an outside force of indemnity. In fact, by the year 2020, vaccines will have prevented 500 million cases of illness, consequently preventing 20 million deaths (Science Daily 1). Because vaccines perform so incredibly well, their near infinite protection should be mandatory to youth. A disease often associated with paralysis in youth, even affecting president FDR, paralytic poliomyelitis showcases the power of disease protection from vaccines. According to the CDC, before Polio vaccine became widely available, 13,000-20,000 were reported singularly in the United States annually. However, following a strict vaccination …show more content…

Known as ‘herd immunity’ or ‘community immunity,’ there lies an indirect protection of unvaccinated people when a large group of people is vaccinated against a certain disease. Therefore, if children are vaccinated against a disease, they are also protecting their family and friends. Additionally, according to Vaccines.gov, if enough people are vaccinated against a disease, about 80% of a population or less, the entire community has a lesser chance of getting the disease (Page 3). In other words, when a large age group of people, children, are vaccinated and therefore immune to disease, everyone else is protected as well indirectly. Furthermore, as well as unintentionally protecting peers who chose to be unvaccinated, children who are vaccinated are also protecting the subset of people that do not have the option to become vaccinated. There lies a small subset of people who cannot be vaccinated due to a variety of reasons including undergoing chemotherapy, or having severe allergies, HIV/AIDS, or even Type One Diabetes. The protection of these people is herd immunity (Epidemics: Opposing Viewpoints page 117). Concluding, by immunizing all youth, the compromised also become better protected as a whole. Also, one example of the representation in the introduction of of herd immunity is the pneumococcal vaccine. After the introduction of the

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