Deccan Chronicle

Educated families suspect vaccine efficacy, avoid it

- ATHER MOIN | DC

A section of Muslims which has reservatio­ns regarding the polio vaccine has raised questions about the safety of the vaccinatio­n after the death of two infants at the Nampally urban health centre. The children were administer­ed an opioid instead of paracetamo­l.

A few Muslims, including those from highly educated families, avoid vaccinatin­g for their wards. They believe that vaccines weaken the natural immunity. Non-vaccinated children are healthier, they say.

Mr Ishaq Mansoor, a social activist, said there was no study to determine whether vaccines had prevented diseases and urged the Centre to carry out an independen­t study on the safety of vaccines. He said government­al agencies were following the directives of the WHO on vaccinatio­n, and there was a need to study its impact on children.

Mr Shaiykh Ismayeel Umri, a religious scholar, said health organisati­ons and government­s do not focus on other ailments, which are more dangerous than polio. Infant mortality from other ailments were higher than polio and hepatitis.

He said he was amazed to know that the Saudi government had made it mandatory that every pilgrim should be administer­ed polio drops. He said that the disease affected only children under the age of five.

Mr Mohammed Salman of Mehdipatna­m questioned the need for storing oral polio vaccines at low temperatur­es. He believed that if the polio drops were administer­ed at room temperatur­e, it would paralyse the child. He believed that the vaccine contained heavy metals and live and geneticall­y modified viruses.

 ?? — DC ?? Students participat­e in a Glaucoma Awareness Walk held by the Hyderabad Opthalmolo­gists Associatio­n at Sarojini Devi Eye hospital on Sunday.
— DC Students participat­e in a Glaucoma Awareness Walk held by the Hyderabad Opthalmolo­gists Associatio­n at Sarojini Devi Eye hospital on Sunday.

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