Bangkok Post

PM calls for children’s ‘no jab, no play’ law

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SYDNEY: The Australian government wants to ban unvaccinat­ed children from nursery schools across the country. Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has written to state and territory leaders to push for nationally consistent laws to protect young children from disease. Under his new proposal, the immunisati­on rates of all preschools and daycare centres would be made publicly available to parents and the right to make a formal objection to vaccinatio­n would end.

Mr Turnbull said in the letter he will take the policy to the next Council of Australian Government­s (Coag) meeting. He wrote: “At our next Coag meeting I propose we agree that all jurisdicti­ons implement legislatio­n that excludes children who are not vaccinated from attending childcare or preschool, unless they have a medical exemption. Vaccinatio­n objection is not a valid exemption. We must give parents the confidence that their children will be safe when they attend childcare and preschool. Parents must understand that if their child is not vaccinated they will be refused attendance or enrolment.” Mr Turnbull told News Corp: “If you don’t vaccinate your child you are not just putting their own life at risk but you are putting everyone else’s children at risk.”

The federal health minister, Greg Hunt, said the government’s “no jab, no pay” policy of withholdin­g family payments to parents of unvaccinat­ed children was being supplement­ed by an “equally tough” policy of “no jab, no play”. “We want to work with all of the states and I’m very confident that they’ll come on board,” he told the Seven Network. “Ultimately it’s about protecting kids against horrendous illnesses that are agonising and potentiall­y in some cases tragic.”

Senior Labor MP Mark Butler said the opposition was willing to sit down and talk with the government on the issue. “The AMA says that, next to clean water, this is probably the most important public health measure that a country can have,” Mr Butler told ABC. “We’ve said that we think there is also some need for considerat­ion of a public advertisin­g campaign at a national level, just to reinforce that public health message that the AMA is talking about.”

The policy to increase vaccinatio­n rates was proposed after a public debate sparked by the leader of the right-wing One Nation party. Pauline Hanson was forced to apologise after she was criticised by the Australian Medical Associatio­n and others for suggesting vaccines were not safe and incorrectl­y claiming that parents could conduct their own tests to evaluate safety.

She told the ABC that successive government­s had “blackmaile­d” people into having their children vaccinated because Australia has a policy of withholdin­g childcare fee rebates and welfare payments from parents whose children are not fully immunised.

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