Texarkana Gazette

Protecting Young Children

CDC says about 100,000 have not been vaccinated

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There was a long period of time when you didn’t hear a lot about measles, mumps, whooping cough and other once-common diseases. Nor did the word “polio” spark the dread it once did.

The reason: Vaccinatio­ns.

It wasn’t that long ago that children were vaccinated as a matter of course. In recent years, though, an anti-vaccine wave has caught hold. It’s still a relatively small movement, but those who are against vaccinatio­ns are serious. Sometimes deadly serious.

There’s a lot of misinforma­tion floating around about vaccines, fueled by the internet and in some cases by outspoken celebritie­s. But their claims that vaccines are responsibl­e for serious medical disorders such as autism have been proven groundless.

Thankfully, most parents do have their children vaccinated. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, nearly 95 percent of children are fully vaccinated by the time they reach kindergart­en.

But according to a separate CDC report released this week, an estimated 100,000 younger children have not been vaccinated against any disease.

Some may say that’s the parents’ choice. But often children too young for vaccinatio­ns mix on the playground or day care with those whose parents refuse to have them vaccinated. If the unvaccinat­ed child comes down with a disease like measles or mumps, that could lead to serious complicati­ons. Contact with senior citizens could lead to infection as well.

These parents may feel justified in denying their own children much-needed protection. And in many states the law will let them get away with it. But they should have the common decency not to endanger others.

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