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Medicine EU

Germany Makes Measles Vaccinations Compulsory For Children (cnn.com) 130

An anonymous reader quotes CNN: Germany's parliament has voted to make measles vaccinations compulsory for children, with parents who fail to immunize their children facing fines of €2,500 ($2,750). The Measles Protection Act, which the Bundestag approved on Thursday, requires all parents to provide evidence that their child has received two measles vaccinations before they are enrolled in school or kindergarten. Medical staff, daycare workers, teachers and workers at community facilities must also be vaccinated under the act, which is due to come into effect in March 2020, a spokesman for the Ministry of Health told CNN.

There has been a resurgence of measles -- a highly infectious viral illness that can spread through the air when an infected person coughs or sneezes -- across the globe... Almost 350,000 measles cases were reported globally in 2018, according to the United Nations children's agency UNICEF -- more than doubling from 2017.

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Germany Makes Measles Vaccinations Compulsory For Children

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  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @01:59AM (#59425170)

    But are we really going to have an long series of "Country X has made measles vaccinations mandatory" stories here on Slashdot?

    • by quenda ( 644621 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @03:51AM (#59425332)

      It is not even that new.
      The former East Germany had compulsory vaccination, and much lower incidence of measles than the West.
      The East still has higher coverage.

      https://www.who.int/bulletin/v... [who.int]

    • "But are we really going to have an long series of "Country X has made measles vaccinations mandatory" stories here on Slashdot?"

      You're already complaning now after only 2 countries?
      We'll have to suffer through 194 more.

  • With three Christian parties that have a big influence in politics this is never going to happen in my country, where we have separation of church and state only on paper.

    • With three Christian parties that have a big influence in politics this is never going to happen in my country, where we have separation of church and state only on paper.

      Sorry, but the religious thing is just an excuse made by clueless parents

      https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/p... [nih.gov] (Hey, this even mentions Netherlands)
      https://www.historyofvaccines.... [historyofvaccines.org]

      • From the first link:

        In Protestantism, there are various denominations without a supreme leading moral figure, such as the Pope in the Catholic Church.

        I'm pretty sure that's because Protestants consider Christ to be their "supreme leading moral figure".

        This gives protestants the advantage to make up any old thing they want, while at least Catholics are restrained by the views of some old guy in the Vatican.....I was raised Protestant, but now I'm pretty sure that if there is a "god", it's probably not the one in the Bible...or the Koran or any other religious book written by people.

        • by arglebargle_xiv ( 2212710 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @06:41AM (#59425652)

          now I'm pretty sure that if there is a "god", it's probably not the one in the Bible...or the Koran or any other religious book written by people.

          Of course not, Linus is never mentioned in any of those books.

        • But even with vaccination, it is only a very tiny number of sects that refuse to use modern medicine. Anti-vax isn't a Christian or a Protestant thing. The number is small enough that it would be highly surprising if any political parties for those groups are large enough to be represented in the Netherlands.

      • See? Stupid idiots. Their god gives them vaccines and they refuse them.

    • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @02:50AM (#59425226)

      You guys managed to relax your drug and prostitution laws just fine...

    • That's weird, I never thought of Netherlands as a particularly Christian country. I guess you had Erasmus.
    • by Sique ( 173459 )
      In Germany, it's two Christian parties with big influences, the Christian Democrats (CDU) and the Christian Socialists (CSU). And both have voted for compulsory Measles vaccination.
      • Took them long enough, though. Should have been done decades ago.

      • by teg ( 97890 )

        In Germany, it's two Christian parties with big influences, the Christian Democrats (CDU) and the Christian Socialists (CSU). And both have voted for compulsory Measles vaccination.

        Isn't that almost the same party, CSU in Bavaria and CDU for the rest of Germany?

      • "In Germany, it's two Christian parties with big influences, the Christian Democrats (CDU) and the Christian Socialists (CSU). "

        But the latter one only in Bavaria, The 'Hillbilly-State' as somebody commented it a bit above.

    • Sorry, but real diseases trump the feelings of imaginary beings.

    • Trolling much, feeling insecure? I remind you that Italy is one of the few Western European countries that never abolished compulsory vaccinations [wikipedia.org].
    • by Tom ( 822 )

      You do realize that the current government in Germany is headed by a christian party and the current chancellorix is daughter of a priest?

    • by Jarwulf ( 530523 )
      What does Christianity have to do with it other than a flimsy excuse to lash out against Christians? Antivaxxing is primarily a overprotective mommying thing and academically is a libertarian thing. Although I agree with vaccinations I can admit unlike most others here that not everything is a black and white issue. They can and will use this precedent as an excuse for other things, and I think the increased coverage over the past couple years is more reflective of a coordinated push rather than any real si
  • by ChromeAeonuim ( 1026946 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @02:56AM (#59425236)
    I'm sure some libertarian sorts will show up to complain about how this is some overstep of government, but I say good on Germany. Part of being a parent is that you take care of your kids. If someone isn't going to do that because they put some Facebook witchdoctor above all reason, than that is exactly the time for the government to get involved. The point of a government is to help people who can't help themselves, and kids sure can't help if if they've got crazy parents who will put them at risk of potentially fatal diseases just to prove a stupid point.

    Anyone who wants to treat their own health problems with a bag of polished gemstones is still more than free to do so. But this involves minors, who should have a right to health and an education, and furthermore, it also involved infectious diseases that effect everyone. I'm less interested in ideology than I am in not getting measles.
    • A big part of government is protection of the public in general. Which means that protections of individuals will sometimes be in opposition to it. That is, things like rules of law that prevent rampant crime (even in poor areas), As such, public health is a major part of government responsibility (epidemics will affect everyone). Where Libertarians stand often depends upon the individual, whether the person is adamant that individual liberties are more important than the public good, or if they're smart

      • yes, but from both a moral and legal perspective the cost of preventing or prohibiting something is magnitudes less then the cost of requiring or forcing it or even encouraging it. Forcing people to do something , even if they consider it immoral , should only be done with the the utmost necessity, because morally speaking a person might be injured by not be allowed something that is good , but physically forcing something to do something against there will is a much greater act of violence. Also from and

      • This issue isn't about minors, it's about everyone. Even adults get sick.

        I think we are now enough years away from the MMR scare that the first bunch of unvaccinated children are entering legal adulthood. That has two effects: 1. Measles become much more dangerous when you are an 18 year old compared to a six year old. 2. All this kids can now decide that they want to get vaccinated, no matter what the parents decided.

        So the effect is that a lot of 18 year olds are getting vaccinated now.

  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @03:02AM (#59425252) Journal
    Common sense. Benefit to everyone outweighs the risks.
  • by DrXym ( 126579 )
    It's time countries take a stand and repair the damage caused by these antivax fuckwits. The only exemption to vaccination should be genuine medical conditions, nothing else.
  • I still have never seen any actual science that justifies these actions.
    Any law that universally 'FORCES' people to do something should be one that has a heavy burden of proof that it is necessary for the good of the whole society, partially because it will make people less happy and also because doing so always has a high economic cost. It is much easier to prohibit an action then to force one.

    so near as I can tell.

    About 27 people a year die in the united states from lightening strikes. ( I couldn't find

    • 30% of 27/317 million =.000000002% per person decrease in chances of measles death and what cost per person?

      Shouldn't we first invest in better maths education?

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