In January 2014, 102 measles cases linked to an outbreak at Disneyland were reported in 14 states. The outbreak alarmed the CDC, which declared the disease eliminated in the U.S. in the year 2000. Many health officials have tied the outbreak to the rising number of unvaccinated children under the age of 12. Proponents of a mandate argue that vaccines are necessary in order to insure herd immunity against preventable diseases. Herd immunity protects people who are unable to get vaccines due to their age or health condition. Opponents of a mandate believe the government should not be able to decide which vaccines their children should receive. Some opponents also believe there is a link between vaccinations and autism and vaccinating their children will have destructive consequences on their early childhood development.
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@923MMVM3yrs3Y
No , they shouldn’t require any shots other then the ones they have now or unless the ones have been fully tested threw
@929CSFC3yrs3Y
Leave the decision up to the parents
@8Q6C4Y44yrs4Y
No, unless the disease is very deadly and it is a national emergency
@8XHNZZH3yrs3Y
For certain disease like the flu,
@8QTTV5B4yrs4Y
No, freedom is a big part of America. Besides some children can't be vaccinated due to unhealthy reactions to the vaccine. I am a firm supporter that vaccines work, but it's ultimately the parents choice. Education that teaches vaccines are good should be given to all people to reduce the amount of people who are anti-vax.
@8W6YXD44yrs4Y
Absolutely not. It takes years for a vaccine to be complete and perfected. It would be horrible to put unknown things into a child that has been made in under a year
@8XXPPX43yrs3Y
only if all long term and short term effects were studied
@8W92Y773yrs3Y
Only for vaccines that were fully tested and not just thrown out to the public in 5 months.
@773QT3N3yrs3Y
Yes, but only with thoroughly tested FDA approved, non mRNA Vaccines
@8CN7P7L4yrs4Y
No, the Goverment should not force what you can do with your body
@8CQ85DK5yrs5Y
Yes aside from religious beliefs and medical conditions.
@riddlecongress4yrs4Y
No. We are a country built on Freedom and Freedom of choice. Religious exemptions are here to stay. However, I do support public health requirements for infectious diseases such as measles, black death, and other eradicated deadly diseases.
@8GMPK8G4yrs4Y
No, if the child isn't vaccinated that's there choice.
@8KH79S24yrs4Y
I think it should be the choice of the parent/s.
@8PNDVD73yrs3Y
No, that should be the parent or guardian's choice, not the government
@8PRKY7Q4yrs4Y
No, the government doesn’t need to tell me what vaccines I need to have. It should people’s choice not governments choice.
@8WDX77R3yrs3Y
Yes , like influenza and measles...etc. except for covid- 19.
@8WC3QKP3yrs3Y
No, people/parents should decide for themselves and children how they feel about the disease.
@8WJ28R93yrs3Y
Yes if the vaccine is reliable and tested
@8WSHGPX3yrs3Y
Not if the child can't get vaccinated for medical reasons.
@8X3LCNH3yrs3Y
Allow the parents to decide what is right for their children and families. Provide comprehensive materials and studies that are unbiased for them to review and make their own decision. Require only certain vaccinations when death rates or damage rate from illness (in healthy individuals) is above a certain rate and vaccines have been proven to drastically reduce the "spread" of the virus. Vaccines should not be forced on healthy individuals when the death rate is very low and when they don't reduce the spread. If you can still pass the virus after being vaccinated, it's not effective.
@8XBX2P53yrs3Y
No, it is a violation of your Constitutional rights.
@rightandbased3yrs3Y
Yes, but only for diseases with very exceptionally high mortality and hospitalization rates, with exemptions for those with religious objections.
@8ZH59GG3yrs3Y
No, it's up to the parents to decide what's right for there children.
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