In the United States, every school maintains records on the immunization status of its students. Which students are fully vaccinated? Which have medical exemptions? Who get a religious or philosophical exemption for one or more vaccines? In the event of an outbreak of a vaccine preventable disease, these records can be used by the school to figure out which students are at risk and should be kept home until the outbreak is over. Public health officials also benefit from these records, as they can report vaccination rates across the state. This can show which communities may be vulnerable to a disease outbreak and narrow down where investigators need to look for potential index cases or contacts during an outbreak.
I've written before about an instance where parents forged their children's immunization records so they could get into day care. In that instance, the unimmunized children developed chicken pox, creating a small outbreak of the disease that put the other children, as well as two pregnant staff members, at risk of infection. This raised the question of the legal liability to the parents for their actions, handily addressed by The Skeptical Lawyer. No charges were filed in that case, and it's unlikely that any legal actions would have prevailed, according to the Skeptical Lawyer. A couple months after my original post, there was a chicken pox outbreak at a day care center in Alaska's Kenai Peninsula. Just like the earlier case, the parents refused vaccination for their children, ultimately resulting in a small outbreak.
The issues raised by those two events came together recently, again in Alaska's Kenai Peninsula. A nurse at a public school forged parent signatures on four immunization documents, noting in one instance vaccine refusal for religious reasons.
Showing posts with label hepatitis B. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hepatitis B. Show all posts
Saturday, February 15, 2014
Forging Potential Harm
Labels:
Alaska,
children,
ethics,
exemptions,
hepatitis A,
hepatitis B,
law,
lying,
vaccines
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Wanted: Hepatitis B
Image from the Public Health Image Library. Logo design by Maggie McFee. More VPD Wanted Poster details here. If you are interested in a print version (16"x20" poster or 4"x5" card), please email me for more information.
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