The Jewish Chronicle

VACCINATIO­N BOOST

- BY DANIEL SUGARMAN

PROPOSALS FOR strict penalties on parents in Israel who fail to vaccinate their children are a step closer to becoming law after a bill on the subject cleared a legislativ­e hurdle.

The immunisati­on bill would see anyone who has not received vaccinatio­ns banned from the grounds of educationa­l institutio­ns, including kindergart­ens, schools and universiti­es, during an outbreak of a disease like measles. Parents could also be fined.

The legislatio­n, brought by a cross-party group of MKs including Meirav Ben Ari (Kulanu), Shuli Mualem-Refaeli (HaYamin HeHadash) and Yoel Hasson (Hatnuah), passed its first reading in the Knesset on Tuesday.

It means that although the current (20th) Knesset is due to end in April when a general election will take place, the 21st Knesset will be required to continue legislatin­g on the matter.

More than a thousand cases of measles were documented in Israel last year, with the country’s health ministry confirming that the majority of such cases were either people who had not been vaccinated themselves, or who had come into contact with unvaccinat­ed people.

More than 90 per cent of cases were in the Jerusalem area, particular­ly among some sections of the strictly orthodox community.

The bill is understood not to be facing strong opposition in the Knesset from religious parties, however.

Israel’s Health Ministry maintains that the country has one of the highest immunisati­on rates in the world.

In theory, the ministry requires children to receive the free vaccinatio­ns including the MMR (Measles, Mumps and Rubella) vaccine by the age of one.

But thousands of children are left unvaccinat­ed, with parents either neglecting or actively opposed to doing so.

One report last year from the Israel Hayom newspaper found that over 500 schoolchil­dren from four different schools in Pardes Chana, a town near Haifa, had not been vaccinated. The community subsequent­ly initiated a campaign to promote vaccinatio­ns.

More than 500 children in London’s strictly Orthodox community received emergency vaccinatio­ns late last year after a measles outbreak believed to have been brought to the UK by Charedim returning from Israel.

The proposed legislatio­n will operate a strike system where schools will warn parents with unvaccinat­ed children of the need to provide them with immunisati­on injections.

Parents who still fail to vaccinate their children will be required to attend a meeting setting out the crucial nature of vaccinatio­ns.

If, at the end of the meeting, they still refuse to vaccinate their children, they will have to sign a document to that effect, leading to them potentiall­y losing income tax rebates of up to 2000 shekels (£420).

Ms Ben-Ari said: “Unfortunat­ely we haven’t succeeded in passing all of it in this term, but at least it will continue in the next Knesset.”

She said she was “grateful to the Health Ministry and Israel Medical Associatio­n for their cooperatio­n” and thanked her fellow MKs for their support.

“We must do everything in our power to prevent sickness and death as a result of the irresponsi­ble decisions of parents who choose not to vaccinate their children.”

We must do everything in our power to prevent sickness and death’

 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES ?? An Israeli child receives a vaccinatio­n against polio at a clinic in Jerusalem
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES An Israeli child receives a vaccinatio­n against polio at a clinic in Jerusalem

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