By MARIA CHENG
Immunizations FAQ - Read answers to frequently asked questions about
immunizations.
RevolutionHealth.com
LONDON (AP) - As doctors struggle to eradicate polio worldwide, one of
their biggest problems is persuading parents to vaccinate their
children. In Belgium, authorities are resorting to an extreme measure:
prison sentences.
Two sets of parents in Belgium were recently handed five month prison
terms for failing to vaccinate their children against polio. Each
parent was also fined 4,100 euros ($8,000).
"It's a pretty extraordinary case," said Dr. Ross Upshur, director of
the Joint Centre for Bioethics at the University of Toronto.
"The Belgians have a right to take some action against the parents,
given the seriousness of polio, but the question is, is a prison
sentence disproportionate?"
The parents can still avoid prison - their sentences were delayed to
give them a chance to vaccinate their children. But if that deadline
also passes without their children receiving the injections, the
parents could be put behind bars.
Because of privacy laws, Belgian officials would not talk specifically
about the case, such as why the parents refused the vaccine or how much
longer they have to vaccinate their children.
The polio vaccine is the only one required by Belgian law. Exceptions
are granted only if parents can prove their children might have a bad
physical reaction to the vaccine.
"Polio is a very serious disease and has caused great suffering in the
past," said Dr. Victor Lusayu, head of Belgium's international vaccine
centre. "The discovery of the vaccine has eliminated polio from Europe
and it is simply the law in Belgium that you have to be vaccinated. ...
At the end of the day, the law must be respected."
Some ethicists back the hardline Belgian stance.
"Nobody has the right to unfettered liberty, and people do not have a
right to endanger their kids," said John Harris, a professor of
bioethics at the University of Manchester.
"The parents in this case do not have any rights they can appeal to.
They have obligations they are not fulfilling."
Aside from Belgium, only France makes polio vaccinations mandatory by
law. In the United States, children must be vaccinated against many
diseases including polio, but most states allow children to opt out if
their parents have religious or "philosophical" objections.
In the U.S. state of Maryland, prosecutors and school officials in one
county threatened truancy charges against parents who failed to
vaccinate their children. The measure sharply reduced the number of
unvaccinated children although nobody has been charged.
The only other case of mandatory polio vaccines is during the Muslim
yearly Hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia. Pilgrims from polio-endemic
countries - Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Pakistan - must prove they
have been vaccinated. Saudi officials even give them an extra dose upon
arrival at the airport.
Since the polio virus can live in the human body for weeks, it jumps
borders easily. That makes health officials even in developed countries
nervous, since the threat of an outbreak remains as long as the virus
is circulating anywhere.
Polio is a highly infectious disease spread through water that mainly
strikes children under five. Initial symptoms include fever, headaches,
vomiting, stiffness in the neck and fatigue. The polio virus invades
the body's nervous system and can lead to irreversible paralysis within
hours. In extreme cases, children can die when their breathing muscles
are immobilized.
Incidence has dropped by 99 percent since the World Health Organization
and partners began their eradication effort in 1988. But the virus is
still entrenched in Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Pakistan, and
occasionally pops up elsewhere.
For developed countries, imported polio cases could cause chaos in the
health system, warned Dr. Steve Cochi, an immunization expert at the
United States' Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
He said that unlike other medical problems, in which rejecting
treatment only affects the individual, refusing a vaccine for a
transmissible disease like polio puts others at risk as well.
"Most of the time, polio outbreaks do spill into the general
population," Cochi said.
Ethicists argue that people who refuse vaccinations are taking
advantage of everyone else who has been vaccinated. Once the majority
of a population is vaccinated, there are few susceptible people the
disease can infect, thus lowering the odds of an outbreak.
People who refuse to be vaccinated are "free riders," Harris said.
"They can only afford to refuse the vaccine because they are surrounded
by people who have fulfilled their obligations to the community."
Health officials doubt that Belgium's strategy will be useful to
countries still battling polio.
"It is up to individual countries to decide their own policies, but we
do not feel that imprisonment would help," said Dr. David Heymann,
WHO's top polio official.
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