National, News, Opinions and Editorials Emily Delikat National, News, Opinions and Editorials Emily Delikat

Where ‘MAHA’ loses me - and should lose you too

A helpful perspective from the Director of Arizona Families for Vaccines - "Kennedy’s messaging dangerously conflates good nutrition and physical fitness with immunity from disease, suggesting that vaccines and medicine are only necessary for those who aren’t “healthy.” While a balanced diet and regular exercise are vital to well-being, health also encompasses preventative medicine, including vaccinations. Vaccines are designed to prevent illness, keeping people healthy by shielding them from preventable diseases. By redefining “health” to exclude modern medicine, Kennedy misleads the public, starting with principles most people can agree on and ending in unscientific conclusions.

... It is essential that President Trump and MAHA advocates understand this balance and select leaders who recognize that a healthy America is one that embraces both diet and exercise as well as modern medicine."

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What Trump might do on vaccines, pandemics, global health, and more 

"Now is the time for the pro-vaccine majority to make their support for immunizations heard. SAFE Communities Coalition and our Families for Vaccines state chapters will continue to advocate for immunizations policies based on science and evidence. The same policies that helped the United States to eliminate many vaccine preventable diseases—diseases we don’t want to see our children needlessly suffer from."

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News, KFF Health News Emily Delikat News, KFF Health News Emily Delikat

How the anti-vaccine movement pits parental rights against public health.

“There’s a freedom piece on the other side of this argument,” said Caitlin Gilmet, communications director at the vaccine advocacy group SAFE Communities Coalition and Action Fund. “You should have the right to protect your family from preventable diseases.”

In January, Gilmet and other child health advocates offered free fried chicken biscuits at the Tennessee Statehouse, handing out flyers as legislators and aides drifted in to eat. One pamphlet enumerated the toll of a 2018-19 measles outbreak in Washington state that sickened 72 people, most of whom were unvaccinated: $76,000 in medical care, $2.3 million for the public health response and an estimated $1 million in economic losses due to illness, quarantine and caregiving.

Barb Dentz, an advocate with Tennessee Families for Vaccines, repeated that most of the state’s constituents support strong policies in favor of immunizations.

“Protecting kids should be such a no-brainer,” Dentz told Republican Rep. Sam Whitson later that morning in his office. Whitson agreed.

“Dr. Google and Facebook have been such a challenge,” he said. “Fighting ignorance has become a full-time job.”

Story by Amy Maxmen, KFF Health News

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