The Vaccination

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It begins as minor flu symptoms. But then things seem to never get any better. As symptoms become more severe, a person is advised to go see a doctor. It turns out the individual did not have the flu. It was something far worse, something more treacherous, something more contagious, something chilling, something life-threatening. This disease is known as bacterial meningitis. It is possibly a college student’s worst nightmare, and a disease that students should be well informed about. But while the bacterial infection is rather rare, it’s also terminal, killing 10 to 12 percent of those it infects, sometimes within hours. The disease attacks and closes up major organs and prevents blood from circulating to limbs, causing tissue to die. Among survivors, 20 percent suffer brain damage, kidney disease, loss of hearing or sight, limb amputations or other severe complications (Dahl). The subject of this disease has become a major topic on college campuses throughout the state of Texas.

The current issue with this disease is that only students who live in campus housing are required to receive vaccination to attend the university. This was made mandatory by the Jamie Schanbuam Act, which was passed in 2009. Jamie was a rare survivor of the disease who attended the University of Texas in 2008 (Hamilton). The most recent incident with this disease and college students was with a student by the name of Nicolis Williams at A&M University. Nicolis was a 20-year-old economics major, and was also an off campus resident who had not received the vaccination. Williams died within four days of complaining of flu-like symptoms. It is believed he caught the disease while attending another student’s Super Bowl party (Reece). Just as easy as it was f...

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...the campus vaccination price, but students pay hundreds of dollars for campus parking, something that may not be used daily. This vaccination would protect thousands people day after day, for years at a time. Is avoiding some minor shin splints more important than avoiding a crippling disease?

All things considered, it should be mandatory for all students attending state universities to receive the vaccination for Meningococcal meningitis, in order to attend the school. Public safety is so important today, and bringing this proposal to a reality would only make society that much safer. For students who desire to make this leap forward immediately for the state of Texas, unite as one voice and demand this protection from the powers above. Let incidents such as Nicolis Williams and Jamie Schanbuam be incidents of the past, and to never be seen again for the future.

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