Compulsory Vaccination: Safeguarding Children and Society

1098 Words3 Pages

Parents must be forced to vaccinate their children. The detrimental effects of failing to vaccinate a child can be spine chilling for not only your child but you and your loved ones around. Despite our best efforts to keep our children safe, their lives are unhygienic, a proverbial germ fest some might argue. Children must be vaccinated as they are unaware of their surroundings and a vaccination will save their life; only the child’s but also the people around them. First of all, let’s clear something up. Vaccines are definitely safe, they undergo prolonged and extensive testing from reputable scientists, doctors and the federal government. They are designed specifically for you and your family to keep you all safe from deadly diseases. …show more content…

A vaccine, once injected into your child's body, with cause a type of immune cell called lymphocytes to react and produce anti bodies to fight the disease the particular vaccine was designed for. This works by injecting weakened or dead antigens of the particular diseases which then prepares the body for the full strength pathogen. This also causes the lymphocytes to remember the particular antigen that the particular pathogen possess. This works as the antigens and antibodies stick together like a key and lock and the pathogen become traps then engulfed and destroyed by a white blood cell. Not only will the vaccination protect your child, but also the people around …show more content…

This may be because of a health condition or their age but these unvaccinated individuals cannot reap the benefit of vaccination like others. These particular individuals are extremely vulnerable due to the lack of the particular antibodies that match the pathogen antigens in the blood stream and lymphatic system. When all the people around them are fully vaccinated this drastically decreases the chances of them contracting that particular virus or

More about Compulsory Vaccination: Safeguarding Children and Society

Open Document