Posted on 12/14/2007 3:55:42 PM PST by Libloather
NJ requires flu shots for preschoolers
By LINDA A. JOHNSON
Associated Press Writer
TRENTON, N.J. --New Jersey on Friday became the first state to require flu shots for preschoolers, saying their developing immune systems and likelihood of spreading germs make them as vulnerable to complications as the elderly.
State Health Commissioner Dr. Fred M. Jacobs approved the requirement and three other vaccines for school children starting Sept. 1, 2008, over the objections of some parent groups.
The new requirements "will have a direct impact on reducing illnesses, hospitalizations and deaths in one of New Jersey's most vulnerable populations - our children," Jacobs said in a statement.
A health advisory board Monday backed the new requirements on a 5-2 vote with one abstention after parents said they worried about the safety of giving young children dozens of vaccine doses. Some also say they don't want government making their medical decisions.
Starting in September, all children attending preschool or licensed day care centers will have to get an annual flu shot, Jacobs said. That makes New Jersey the first state to require flu shots for preschoolers or older students, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.
New Jersey also will require preschoolers to get a pneumococcal vaccine and sixth-graders to get vaccines against meningitis, which New Jersey already requires for college dormitory residents, and a booster shot against whooping cough, which in recent years has seen a resurgence blamed on waning potency of shots given to infants and preschoolers.
The four additional vaccines are recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the American Academy of Pediatrics and other medical groups.
Some parents support proposed legislation that would give families a right to skip required immunizations by lodging a "philosophical objection," as some other states allow. The bill has been sitting in a committee without action for several years.
New Jersey does grant an automatic exemption on religious grounds and allows exemptions for medical reasons.
The new vaccines will be available for free for low-income families, and private insurers generally will cover the cost.
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NJ health department site: http://www.state.nj.us/health
New Jersey Alliance for Informed Choice in Vaccination: http://www.NJAICV.org
However, we live in a republic not the world of metmom.
Nor is this the *world of Sudetenland*.
Why is it that you so strongly object to my *imposing* my world view on others when you don't have any issues imposing another world view on me. I'm told to take it or shut up and that's OK? Just because YOU agree with it?
What I'm supporting is not taking away anyone's freedom. I feel the shots should be voluntary, not mandatory. The choice is the persons.
I'm not supporting inflicting my will on others whether they like it or not, as the state is doing in requiring the shots. That's taking away my freedom and the *it's for the common good* is not enough justification to trash the Constitution.
As I said before, I read 1984 and Brave New World and don't want to live them.
That just makes me want to rush out and get it. /s
And we should willingly line up like sheep because the almighty state says so?
I wonder who's paying them off this time.
Got to say I agree with you, polio is a disease you don’t get over, it’s crippling. If one gets the flu you usually get over it with no lasting effects.
The Gov’t has no business telling people they are required to have their children injected with something.
No thanks NJ, you got this one wrong.
She may be saying that but the CDC is recommending it for girls age 11-12 and a direct quote from their own flier: “Doctors may give it to girls as young as 9 years.” They also say that it can be a “catch-up” vaccine for girls 13-26. It is a 3 dose vaccine (initial, 2 months, 6 months). The rational is give it to them young before their first sexual experience so there is no chance of them already having one of the 4 HPV strains that it protects against (there are over 100 strains).
Does anyone know how many deaths have happened this year because of this vaccine. Last I heard was seven.
Hmmmm...I wonder.
"Flu shots are not "vaccinations". They are unnecessary, and carry many times more health risk than any vaccination."You did not say they are:
"not even close to the same league of importance as vaccines such as diphtheria, polio, measles, tetanus, or pertussis."As for the remainder of your assertions, one, there is no scientific evidence to support your claim of "many more times the risk" and two, there is a very compelling argument that it is in the public's interest to have flu shots, especially among the elderly, the very young, and those who have pulmonary diseases.
I said no compelling interest for MANDATORY flu shots. That is what NJ is doing. You want to give your children a shot, go right ahead. But I choose not to do so, and there is no possibility for any rampant epidemic to occur as a result. Because of that fact, flu shots are totally distinct from critical vaccinations that carry such a risk when people fail to give them to children. You seem to stand alone in this thread in advocating the opposite. Good luck to you.
A flu shot is between 70 percent and 90 percent effective in warding off illness, depending on the length and intensity of a given flu season and your overall health. In a few cases, people who get a flu shot may still get the flu, but they'll get a much less virulent form of the illness and, most important, they'll have a decreased risk of flu-related complications especially pneumonia, heart attack, stroke and death to which older adults are especially vulnerable.Since 90% of the deaths due to flu occur in the elderly, the numbers are fairly convincing. ON the other hand, the chances of anyone dying from a flu vaccination are virtually nil unless you are allergic to eggs.
there is no possibility for any rampant epidemic to occur as a result.YOu have no proof of that statement, and at least in one year, 1918 your statement is provably false. In 1918 about a ahlf a million Americans died of the "Spanish influenza." World wide estimates run as high as 100 million people. While the liklihood of another such outbreak is small, it is still a very real possibility. No longer a rural population as a majority of American were in 1918, an outbreak of such magnitude or worse is a very real possibility. Population compression (crowded conditions) serve to amplify the hazards of rapid transmission, increasing the risks of such a wide-spread lethal outbreak, not lessening it.
The thread is about mandatory flu shots. Do you support them or not?
You might find this article interesting: http://www.hillsdale.edu/news/imprimis/archive/issue.asp?year=2007&month=11
And some interesting passages:
“Secretary Spellings recently gave an interesting interview to Human Events reporter Terence Jeffrey. She was candid and intelligent in the interview, for one thing disarmingly ready to admit the failures of her policies so far, even while defending them and predicting their long-term success. She favors school choice and works to get it implemented, if so far without much success. She has tough words for the education union that is such a dreaded political obstacle to reform. But toward the end of the interview she was asked a pair of questions that she found difficult.
Mr. Jeffrey asked her if she could point to language in the Constitution that authorized the federal government to have a Department of Education. Her reply shows that she knew the bearing of the inquiry: I think we had come to an understanding, at least, of the reality of Washington and the flat world, if you will, that the Department of Education was not going to be abolished, and we were going to invest in our nations neediest students.
Mr. Jeffrey persisted: It is one thing to say that the political reality is we are not going to abolish the federal Department of Education, but can you seriously point to where the Framers actually intended the Constitution to authorize a Department of Education?
The Secretary replied: I cant point to it one way or the other. Im not a constitutional scholar, but Ill look into it for you, Terry. Mr. Jeffrey reports that he did not get his answer.
This is Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings, sworn to uphold the Constitution in the exercise of her office.”
******************snip***********************
“The Department of Education grows now at a rate much faster than the Department of Defense, even in time of war. It grows much faster than the domestic economy, even now when the economy grows rapidly. It grows faster than the population it serves, even when that population is growing. The pace of its growth will quicken with the recent passage of the Higher Education Access Act of 2007, which reduces the size of student loan subsidies, but redeploys that money into outright grants, loan forgiveness, and new programs. If the past is prologue, these new programs will grow as fast as the old ones have done.”
Taken from, “Imprimis” November 2007 edition
Nice...and alarming. DOE (that’s education not energy...another one that needs eliminating) has a budgget of $50 Billion and employs 4000 people, none of whom teach our children. “Talk about waste and fraud.”
The most alarming thing to me was that the Union and DOE continues to expand, as our school age population declines. I guess they don’t believe in variable costs...
I agree, the DOE and the DOE need to be eliminated!
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