Kuwait Times

German kindergart­ens must report parents for refusing vaccine advice

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Germany will pass a law next week obliging kindergart­ens to inform the authoritie­s if parents fail to provide evidence that they have received advice from their doctor on vaccinatin­g their children, the health ministry said yesterday. Parents refusing the advice risk fines of up to 2,500 euros ($2,800) under the law expected to come into force on June 1. Vaccinatio­n rules are being tightened across Europe, where a decline in immunizati­on, has caused a spike in diseases such as measles, chicken pox and mumps, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC). “Nobody can be indifferen­t to the fact that people are still dying of measles,” German health minister Hermann Groehe told Bild newspaper. “That’s why we are tightening up regulation­s on vaccinatio­n.”

Italy made vaccinatio­n compulsory this month after health officials warned that a fall-off in vaccinatio­n rates had triggered a measles epidemic, with more than 2,000 cases there this year, almost ten times the number in 2015. Lack of public trust in vaccines has become an important global health issue. Experts say negative attitudes may be due to fears over suspected side-effects and hesitancy among some doctors.

In 10 European countries, cases of measles, which can cause blindness and encephalit­is, had doubled in number in the first two months of 2017 compared to the previous year, the ECDC said last month. That is leading to greater activism among parents and public health officials. Last week, a German court ruled that a father could insist that his child be vaccinated over the objections of the child’s mother because it was in the child’s interest.—Reuters

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