“Vaccines are the shield that protect our future generations.”
Learn the history, importance, and impact of National Vaccination Day and how vaccines protect communities and prevent deadly diseases world
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“Vaccines are the shield that protect our future generations.”
Learn the history, importance, and impact of National Vaccination Day and how vaccines protect communities and prevent deadly diseases world
B&F Pharmacy apart is our friendly staff and unwavering dedication to customer satisfaction and community well-being.
Our retail pharmacy in Richmond, Texas, stands as a trusted pillar of healthcare within the community, offering a comprehensive array of services aimed at promoting wellness and vitality. As a leading retail pharmacy, we prioritize preventive healthcare as a cornerstone of our mission. Among the myriad of measures available, immunizations emerge as a powerful tool in fortifying the body’s defenses against various diseases.
Since immunization is a form of acute care that focuses on preventing illness rather than treating it.
Immunization has revolutionized public health, playing a vital role in preventing the spread of infectious diseases and safeguarding communities. The development and widespread use of vaccines has profoundly impacted reducing illness, disability, and death worldwide.
The pandemic’s collateral damage, briefly explained.
The world’s attention has been focused on the coronavirus pandemic for the past couple of months, and rightly so. The global death toll has hit 285,000, the economy is in shambles, and our day-to-day lives are completely transformed. It’s obviously a huge deal.
But as we all focus on that, what other problems are being neglected and growing worse? What sort of collateral damage is the world incurring?
The secondary impacts of Covid-19 — including a possible “hunger pandemic” and “poverty tsunami” — are worth taking seriously. The number of deaths they cause, experts caution, could easily outstrip the number of deaths from Covid-19 itself.
That’s not an argument for taking Covid-19 less seriously, relaxing social distancing, or reopening the economy; in the US, epidemiologists emphasize that we are absolutely not ready to do that safely.
Instead, the point is that we’d do well to adopt a wider-angle view on human suffering. When we think about this pandemic, it’s not just the direct effects we need to worry about, but also the secondary effects. In other words, while the coronavirus is a serious problem we need to pay attention to, these other issues are also serious problems that are neglected and that urgently require our attention.
Below are eight examples that are worth highlighting, though this list is by no means exhaustive.
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Children Needn’t Die of Measles in Thailand's Muslim South-https://www.chiangraitimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/vaccination.jpeg -https://www.chiangraitimes.com/children-neednt-die-of-measles-in-thailands-muslim-south.html
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Children Needn’t Die of Measles in Thailand's Muslim South
YALA – Sometimes it’s incredibly easy to save a child’s life. Two doses of the measles vaccine into a child’s arm or thigh is almost 100 percent effective at preventing a disease that starts with a simple fever, but can rapidly progress and have deadly complications.
Since 2000, the safe, inexpensive, and effective measles vaccine has prevented more than 20 million deaths.
But sometimes words can be enough to kill a child. That’s happening now in southern Thailand, where a 9-month-old girl has become at least the 13th measles fatality in the past six months. The cause of the disease outbreak that has infected thousands isn’t poverty, neglect, or a poor health system.
It’s because certain local Islamic teachers are preaching the vaccine is somehow un-Islamic, leading to a drop in vaccination rates and a quick revival of the deadly disease.
The Chularatchamontri – Thailand’s top Muslim spiritual leader – rejects that vaccinations are contrary to Islamic principles. The Central Islamic Council of Thailand has said that even if vaccines contained religiously prohibited items, the medical benefit to a person and the community would take precedence.
Globally, imams and other Islamic leaders have repeatedly issued statements and fatwas describing how immunization is consistent with Islamic principles.
The disinformation campaign opposing vaccinations is likely linked to local leaders who support separatist movements in Thailand’s Muslim-majority southern provinces. Separatist insurgents have burned down public health centers, murdered public health volunteers and hospital staff, and used a hospital for military purposes – all violations of international humanitarian law.
They target the public health system as symbolic of what they consider to be the Thai Buddhist state’s occupation of their homeland. But it’s a tactic that kills children in their community.
Vaccination programs have been successful elsewhere in Thailand in saving children from this uniquely contagious disease. Dissuading vaccinations for preventable diseases is less direct than burning down public health centers or placing a bomb outside a school, but it can lead to equally devastating consequences.
The work of the doctors and public health officials to ensure all children in southern Thailand are vaccinated should be allowed to proceed without interference. Children’s lives depend upon it.
By Bede Sheppard Human Rights Watch
Vaccines are responsible for preventing close to 2.5 million deaths per year. A vaccine (especially meant for children) can have amplified effects if it is given in conjunction with vitamins, antibiotics, and the like.