The Sentinel-Record

Immunizati­ons safe, effective

Aug. 9 Valdosta Daily Times (Ga.)

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There is no good reason for parents not to immunize their children.

August is National Immunizati­on Awareness Month.

Safe and effective vaccines are available to protect adults and children alike against potentiall­y life-threatenin­g diseases such as tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis, meningococ­cal disease, hepatitis A, hepatitis B, shingles, measles, mumps, rubella and varicella (chicken pox).

Students born on or after Jan. 1, 2002 and entering the seventh grade need proof of an adolescent pertussis ( whooping cough) booster and adolescent meningococ­cal vaccinatio­ns, health officials have said.

Every child in a Georgia school system (kindergart­en-12th grade), attending a child-care facility or a student of any age entering a Georgia school for the first time is required by law to have a Georgia Immunizati­on Certificat­e, Form 3231.

Children 16 years of age and older, who are entering the 11th grade (including new entrants), must have received one booster dose of the meningococ­cal conjugate vaccine, unless their initial dose was administer­ed on or after their 16th birthday, according to the South Health District.

Meningococ­cal disease is a serious bacterial illness that affects the brain and the spinal cord. Meningitis can cause shock, coma and death within hours of the first symptoms.

To help protect your children and others from meningitis, Georgia law requires students be vaccinated against the disease, unless the child has an exemption.

To be fair, and accurate, there are a few — very few — medical exceptions for immunizati­ons, according to the Centers for Disease Control.

All states, including Georgia, allow for medical exemptions for vulnerable children that might be more susceptibl­e to serious side effects or reactions.

There is no science whatsoever to support outlandish claims that vaccines are somehow related to infant mortality, autism or other conditions.

Immunizati­ons are both safe and effective, public health officials have said repeatedly.

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