New Straits Times

‘Provide alternativ­e for unvaccinat­ed children if they are barred from schools’

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KUALA LUMPUR: All children, regardless of whether they are vaccinated or not, have a right to education, the United Nations Internatio­nal Children’s Emergency Fund (Unicef) said.

Its representa­tive in Malaysia, Marianne Clark-Hattingh, said the government needed to consider the consequenc­es of banning unvaccinat­ed children from school as this would affect their wellbeing.

She said if the children were denied access to school, the government had a duty to ensure there were provisions for these children to receive education.

Clark-Hattingh was responding to health advocates’ calls to make immunisati­on compulsory for school admission.

Among them were Malaysian Islamic Doctors Associatio­n president Datuk Dr Ahmad Shukri Ismail and Malaysia I-Medic deputy president Professor Dr Azizi Ayob, who said unvaccinat­ed children should not be allowed to enter school as all children could be at risk from deadly diseases and an epidemic might occur if not handled properly.

“No child should be blamed for not being vaccinated. Preventing an unvaccinat­ed child from going to school is a violation of their right to access education,” said Clark-Hattingh.

She said not vaccinatin­g a child puts others at risk and it was right for the government to give importance to the vaccinatio­n of children. However, she said, mandatory laws were not the best way to do it.

She said based on Unicef ’s experience, there was little evidence to show that mandatory laws improved vaccinatio­n coverage.

“There are better, more effective approaches to foster and sustain the demand for immunisati­on. We need to understand why parents are reluctant to vaccinate and guide them with the right informatio­n and targeted campaigns.

“There is also a need to constantly engage healthcare providers for improved communicat­ion with clients,” she said.

Clark-Hattingh said the child’s best interest was served when parents and caregivers act to protect them from infectious diseases with vaccinatio­n based on informed decision or prompted by non-coercive measures and interventi­ons.

She urged health workers, both at public and private health facilities, to continue their efforts to ensure that every child in every community was reached with lifesaving vaccines.

“Malaysia, as a signatory to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, is equally mandated to give children the best healthcare and education possible,” she said.

She said the resurgence of lifethreat­ening preventabl­e communicab­le diseases, such as measles and diphtheria, in Malaysia, as well as the rising number of parents reluctant to vaccinate their children was worrying.

 ??  ?? Marianne Clark-Hattingh
Marianne Clark-Hattingh

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