The Jerusalem Post

Hundreds of children not vaccinated for measles – report

Health Ministry says outbreak due to parents not taking children to get shots

- • By ZACHARY KEYSER

An estimated 500 to 600 children from four schools have not been vaccinated in Pardess Hanna in the Haifa district, according to a report on Sunday in Israel Hayom. The Health Ministry has not held a significan­t follow-up with the communitie­s to address the problem until this past week, even though the measles outbreak has been prevalent for the past few months.

The Health Ministry has since shown their inability to contain the outbreak within Israel’s affected communitie­s, and at the moment there have been 2,000 reported cases of Israelis who have contracted measles during the last few months, according to Israel Hayom.

The measles outbreak has surfaced due to the failure of thousands of parents to vaccinate their children, particular­ly among the ultra-Orthodox communitie­s in Jerusalem, according to Health Ministry officials. Community leaders and rabbis have sent mobile units to these neighborho­ods to vaccinate citizens living in the affected areas.

Causing an uproar, members of the Knesset Health Committee over the past few months have said more should be done to encourage haredim to agree to be vaccinated, while quoting the Health Ministry data.

“The antisemite­s in Europe once blamed the Jews for spreading the Black Plague,” Bayit Yehudi coalition head Shuli Moalem-Refaeli said. “Now, [the committee] is blaming the haredim for the measles. It is too bad that a meeting with national importance has stooped to a blame-fest.”

However, last Thursday, the Pardess Hanna community underwent a successful vaccinatio­n campaign initiated by the parents of the children, and not by the Health Ministry itself.

The Health Ministry has not held any informatio­nal seminars to encourage these parents to immunize their children, and even though the ministry offers to pay for these services, the parents still decline them just the same, according to Israel Hayom.

“It’s really tragic how for years the Health Ministry has hardly done anything to inform the parents within these schools, who refuse to vaccinate their children and are not privy to public awareness and the encouragem­ent of immunizati­on,” a senior Health Ministry official told Israel Hayom.

“In the center of the country, where a severe measles problem has already been discovered, the Ministry of Health has not done anything substantia­l to gain effective control over the area in years, it seems.”

However, the Health Ministry claims that immunizati­on rates in Israel are among the highest in the world, despite the current measles outbreak.

“Israel Hayom’s health commentato­r chooses to interpret the reality in isolation from the data, and the rates of immunizati­on in Israel are the highest in the world, thanks to the ministry’s long-standing activities,” the Health Ministry said in response to data published by Israel Hayom. “To wonder about the irrelevant motives of the commentato­r, and the latest outbreak was the result of outbreaks abroad and population­s not registered within the Ministry of the Interior, so, therefore, the health system has no access to them. Neverthele­ss, the ministry carried out unpreceden­ted measures and increased the rate of immunizati­on. We are proud of the team and the ministry for their impressive recruitmen­t.”

On average, about half of the children in these communitie­s are not immunized due to the wishes of their parents. The Health Ministry requires children by the age of one year to be vaccinated for measles and other contagious diseases, however, mostly due to religious beliefs parents do not follow this law. School principals also hold no formal authority in enforcing health safety in and around schoolyard­s.

While the outbreak continues to grow, the Health Ministry will be forced to change their strategy toward these communitie­s in the near future – implicatin­g and administra­ting more successful, informativ­e and persuasive campaigns without ignoring affected communitie­s.

 ?? (Amir Cohen/Reuters) ?? CHILDREN IN ASHDOD. The measles outbreak has surfaced due to the failure of parents to vaccinate their children, particular­ly in ultra-Orthodox communitie­s.
(Amir Cohen/Reuters) CHILDREN IN ASHDOD. The measles outbreak has surfaced due to the failure of parents to vaccinate their children, particular­ly in ultra-Orthodox communitie­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel