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Pediatrician: Open Dialogue is Needed on Vaccinations

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Friday, February 13, 2015   

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Doctors, parents and politicians across the nation are involved in a heated debate over vaccinations following a measles outbreak that began at Disneyland in California.

Top health leaders have linked the outbreak to children who were not vaccinated for the disease. Pediatrician Dr. Lainna Callentine said it's crucial that parents and their child's pediatrician have an open dialogue about the reasons they are choosing - or not choosing - to vaccinate.

"As a pediatrician, my role is to educate and to empower parents to make healthy decisions on behalf of their children," she said. "But I have to respect that a parent has a right, ultimately, to make that decision, and that is not my personal right on their behalf."

According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 100 people from 14 states were reported to have measles in January, most cases linked to the Disneyland outbreak. Last year, a measles outbreak struck Ohio's Amish country, with more than 380 people diagnosed with the virus.

Parents choose to not vaccinate or delay vaccinating children for many reasons including religious beliefs, medical issues, poverty or a lack of access to medical care. Regardless of the reasons, some doctors refuse to accept patients whose parents are anti-vaccine. Callentine said that sends the wrong message.

"I see a problem with physicians who do not allow healthy dialogue and questions," she said. "When you push them out of your practice, you're really pushing them into the arms of, perhaps, some of the charlatans out there who are feeding a lot of misinformation."

According to a Pew Research Center report, about 68 percent of Americans say vaccines should be required, and 30 percent say vaccines should be a matter of personal choice.

A lot of information is available about vaccinations, Callentine said, and parents should take advantage of it before making a decision for their child.

"It's important for parents to understand the information they are looking at and where that information comes from," she said. "It's also important to understand how those illnesses are transmitted There's a lot of other factors that they need to look at as far as risks to the vaccine, or risks to contracting that illness."

The Pew report is online at pewinternet.org. Find updated measles outbreak information at cdc.gov.


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