Toronto Star

Doctors want proof of vaccinatio­n from students

Parents should declare child’s immunizati­on status to school, physicians say

-

HALIFAX— Canada’s doctors stopped short of advocating for mandatory vaccinatio­ns for children on Wednesday, calling, instead, for parents to provide proof to school officials that their children have been vaccinated.

A resolution passed at the Canadian Medical Associatio­n’s annual general meeting in Halifax called on government­s to authorize elementary and secondary schools to require parents to declare their child’s immunizati­on status.

The resolution called for public health officials to have discussion­s with parents if their children are not adequately immunized.

“I want to stress that the proposal does not call for mandatory vaccinatio­n, but rather an approach that allows appropriat­e public health measures to protect vulnerable children in the event of an infectious disease outbreak,” CMA president Cindy Forbes told a news conference.

Ontario and New Brunswick are currently the only provinces that currently require immunizati­on records when a child is being registered for school.

Forbes said it’s critical that health officials reach out to educate the public on the importance of immunizati­on, but she said the proposal does not call for mandatory vaccinatio­n because doctors realize people don’t want to be told what to do.

“It really kind of inflames the conversati­on and we’re looking to have a very reasoned, rational conversati­on with our patients.”

When asked to clarify whether parents would have to provide proof to schools, Forbes was clear.

“That is what we are asking: that there’s some proof that they’ve been immunized,” she said.

Forbes said the CMA views its resolution as a “checkpoint” for gathering the informatio­n needed as health officials try to boost vaccinatio­n rates.

She said that with many provinces having different immunizati­on schedules, the CMA is looking for federal leadership, or at least an alliance of the provinces, in establishi­ng a national registry of immunizati­ons.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada