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Showing posts with label Measles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Measles. Show all posts

Sunday, 18 September 2016

Repeating once again – vaccinate!

A short summary on vaccines and why it's important to ensure that your children are vaccinated.



Repeating once again – vaccinate!
thereby providing indirect protection for unimmunised persons.
How herd immunity develops.

Every year, vaccines save the lives of over 2.5 million people and prevent 750,000 from suffering disabilities.


Immunity is the body’s way of preventing disease. The immune system recognises germs that enter the body (called antigens) and produces proteins called antibodies to fight them.
Most of the time, the immune system isn’t able to work fast enough to prevent the antigen from causing disease, so the child still gets sick.
Nevertheless, the immune system “remembers” that particular antigen, and if it reappears, the body will be ready to respond much faster the next time around to prevent any infections.
This protection is called immunity.
Vaccination, on the other hand, helps your child develop immunity without him/her getting sick in the process.
image: http://www1.star2.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/SFITX_ANR_1108_P8IMMUNIZATION.PDF.jpg
SFITX_ANR_1108_P8IMMUNIZATION.PDF
Why vaccines?
Routine childhood vaccinations protect your child from serious diseases like tuberculosis, hepatitis B, diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, influenza, measles, mumps and rubella.
Vaccination protects children from serious illness and complications of vaccine-preventable diseases, which, in some cases, can lead to brain damage, or even death.
Some vaccine-preventable diseases can also result in prolonged disability and can take a financial toll because of lost time at work, medical bills or long-term disability care.
What is the NIP?
NIP stands for “National Immunisation Programme”. It consists of a list of recommended routine vaccinations for children that must be taken without exception!
The vaccines are provided for free and are available at all public hospitals and selected clinics (klinik kesihatan).
Why so many vaccines?
The immune system is robust and is able to take on more than just a few weakened antigens.
In fact, the human body takes in far more antigens from the air, water and environment daily.
Are there any side effects?
Vaccines are manufactured to meet the most stringent and highest standards of safety.
However, a very small percentage of people may experience mild side effects. In extremely rare circumstances, more serious side effects can occur, like allergic reactions.
Nevertheless, we must remember that any medical intervention comes with some degree of risk.
But avoiding it altogether solely because you want to avoid risk is senseless because doing nothing is also associated with risks.
image: http://www1.star2.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/sfit_fitpp1109_py_2.jpg
How the body develops immunity.
How the body develops immunity.
Will vaccines cause autism?
The association between autism and vaccination (particularly the MMR vaccine) is one of the biggest myths in medicine.
Researchers have time and time again debunked the link between the MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccine and autism.
The latest study, which referenced 67 high quality scientific articles, concluded that immunisation does not lead to autism.
And this has been confirmed by global health agencies such as the World Health Organization and the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Having your child immunised helps to protect them from many serious childhood infections, some of which may be life-threatening.
There’s no doubt that vaccines are the best option for both your child and the population at large.
Don’t wait, make the right decision and see your doctor to have your child immunised today.
http://www.star2.com/health/2016/09/11/repeating-once-again-vaccinate/

Sunday, 4 December 2011

WHO warns of measles spread in Europe




A child receives a vaccine in
 Rotterdam, the Netherlands. The
World Health Organization …
The World Health Organization on Friday warned that Europe faces an explosion of measles cases next year unless it takes urgent steps to contain the viral respiratory disease.

In the first nine months of 2011, 36 Western European nations reported a total of 26,000 measles cases, including more than 14,000 in France alone, according to the WHO's latest data.
There were nine deaths, six in France, as well as 7,288 hospitalizations.

Measles -- a contagious illness characterized by high fever and the eruption of small red spots -- is particularly virulent in Europe from February to May
.
Outside Europe, the WHO said, measles had also spread in Democratic Republic of Congo, with more than 100,000 cases, as well as in Nigeria and Somalia, with more than 15,000 cases each.

In Europe, 90 percent of cases affected adolescents and adults who had not been vaccinated or had failed to receive follow-up vaccinations.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a similar warning on Thursday in which it said the European rise in measles began in late 2009, after six years of decline.

In order to reach global health targets of eliminating measles by 2015, the CDC recommended that vaccinations cover 95 percent of the population with two doses of measles-containing vaccine.

http://news.yahoo.com/warns-measles-spread-europe-132902661.html
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