The Promise of Good Health; Are We Jumping Off the Cliff in the U.S.?
In the United States, many legislators and public health officials
are busy trying to make vaccines de facto compulsory—either by removing
parental/personal choice given by existing vaccine exemptions or by
imposing undue quarantines and fines on those who do not comply with the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC’s) vaccine edicts.
Officials in California are seeking to override medical opinion about fitness for vaccination, while those in New York are mandating the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine for 6-12-month-old infants for whom its safety and effectiveness “have not been established.”
American children would be better served if these officials—before
imposing questionable and draconian measures—studied child health
outcomes in Japan. With a population of 127 million, Japan has the
healthiest children and the very highest “healthy life expectancy” in the world—and
the least vaccinated children of any developed country. The U.S., in
contrast, has the developed world’s most aggressive vaccination schedule
in number and timing, starting at pregnancy, at birth and in the first
two years of life. Does this make U.S. children healthier? The clear
answer is no. The U.S. has the very highest infant mortality rate of all
industrialized countries, with more American children dying at birth and in their first year than in any other comparable nation—and more than half
of those who survive develop at least one chronic illness. Analysis of
real-world infant mortality and health results shows that U.S. vaccine
policy does not add up to a win for American children.
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