Jamaica Gleaner

Parents urged to have children fully vaccinated

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THE HEALTH ministry is reminding parents to ensure that their children are fully vaccinated before sending them to school in the new school year. Vaccinatio­ns are given to prevent 10 diseases that have historical­ly proven to be harmful to children, causing serious complicati­ons and even death, including polio, measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria, pertussis (whooping cough), tetanus, and hepatitis B.

The vaccines are commonly administer­ed by drops in the mouth or through injections.

Programme Developmen­t Officer in the Family Health Unit at the Ministry of Health, Dr Julia Rowe Porter, said that it is mandatory for children to be vaccinated for these diseases before attending school.

The ministry, therefore, mandates that children entering day care, preschool, nursery, primary and preparator­y school must be properly vaccinated.

“There is a vaccinatio­n schedule that starts at birth and the vaccinatio­n schedule that every child must adhere to, and this goes up to the age of six. Once they enter primary school or prep school, which will be children around seven years of age, they

should be adequately and fully immunised to enter,” she said.

FIRST LINE OF DEFENCE

Rowe Porter pointed out that the vaccines are the first line of defence to protect a child’s underdevel­oped immune system against diseases.

“Vaccines are not treatment. They are given to prevent you from getting sick if you come in contact with the germ. You have to get the vaccine before you are exposed to the germ, so that the immune system will already have the antibodies ready and on hand so that once you are exposed to the germ, then your body can mount an effective and increased immune response to prevent you from getting sick,” she explained.

Rowe Porter said that a child who attends school without being immunised is highly susceptibl­e to contractin­g life-threatenin­g diseases and also poses a potentiall­y serious public-health risk to others.

“If children are not protected and they enter a school setting, then there is a risk that the child will be exposed to diseases. Also, if we get an imported case of one of these diseases and children are not vaccinated, this can start an outbreak among the children in school, so it is important for every child to be vaccinated so we can protect all children that are in schools, their families, and the wider society,” she said.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Chief Medical Officer in the Ministry of Health Dr Winston De La Haye (left) administer­s polio drops to young Mickayla Edwards during the official launch of the 14th Vaccinatio­n Week in the Americas at Emancipati­on Park in New Kingston on April 23....
CONTRIBUTE­D Chief Medical Officer in the Ministry of Health Dr Winston De La Haye (left) administer­s polio drops to young Mickayla Edwards during the official launch of the 14th Vaccinatio­n Week in the Americas at Emancipati­on Park in New Kingston on April 23....

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