Vaccination Argumentative Essay

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Cough. Sneeze. Wheeze. When people have illnesses or diseases, they often think about how miserable they are, and most have asked the question, “Why me?” So, why is it, then, that 5% of children in kindergarten are unvaccinated against preventable diseases that would eliminate them feeling miserable? Why is it that 26 states have not reported meeting a government target of 95% coverage for the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine when it would get rid of those “why me” thoughts? Vaccinations are important because they help stop the spread of preventable diseases and work to eventually eradicate them. Children who are not vaccinated can spread disease to children who are too young to receive vaccines or to people with weakened immune systems. It is up to the majority of the population to help protect these vulnerable people. Vaccinations have been proven time and time again to be completely safe and effective.
Vaccinations are an important part of our world and communities because they halt the spread of preventable diseases, such as the measles, mumps, and the whooping cough. Vaccinations also help eventually get rid of these diseases for good. Matthew F. Daley, a pediatrician and researcher, writes in Scientific American, “... the failure to vaccinate children endangers both the health of …show more content…

Most vaccine studies have a large population sample, which helps study reliability: “Because vaccines are given to huge numbers of people, including healthy infants, they are held to a much higher safety standard than medications used for people who are already sick” (Daley 8). Additionally, a NCBI NIH population study conducted in 2002 studied whether the MMR vaccination was associated with bowel problems and developmental regression in children with autism, while also searching for a “new form” of autism. As stated in the published article, the results were as

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