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Tag: vaccine mandates

  • 3 trends in Miami healthcare: dental help, vaccine mandates, medical coverage

    Recent trends in Miami’s healthcare include dental outreach care, vaccine mandates and health insurance coverage.

    In Florida, Medicaid expansion remains contested as Congress debates ACA subsidies.

    Vaccine mandates face rollback attempts, creating tension between public health goals and personal choice.

    And community collaboration offers new access points for dental health. Opa-locka clinic initiatives provide free dental services through a mobile unit.

    Catch up with our recent health coverage below.

    Lily Lopez, a dental assistant with Caring for Miami, fills out paperwork inside the Mobile Dental Clinic in Opa-locka. Caring for Miami is providing free dental care for uninsured and underserved residents. By Photo by Matias J. Ocner

    NO. 1: AT AN OPA-LOCKA CLINIC, MUSLIM AND CHRISTIAN GROUPS PARTNER TO OFFER FREE DENTAL CARE

    For the first time since it opened in 2008, patients at an Opa-locka healthcare clinic will be able to receive consistent dental care — from cleanings to cancer screenings and root canals — and it’s not going to cost them a penny. | Published September 5, 2025 | Read Full Story by Lauren Costantino



    A 14-year-old gets his first Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine shot from Nurse Erica Goodin at the South Miami Children’s Clinic on May 15 last year. About 14,3411,629 eligible Floridians — 67.1% of the state’s population — have completed the two-dose series of either the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines or have completed Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose vaccine, according to the CDC. By Pedro Portal

    NO. 2: FLORIDA PUSHES TO END VACCINE MANDATES. WHAT DOCTORS SAY PARENTS SHOULD KNOW

    For years, Florida has required students to get vaccinated against measles, polio and other highly contagious diseases to attend school. | Published September 4, 2025 | Read Full Story by Michelle Marchante



    A general view of the Florida Capitol on Monday, March 3, 2025, in Tallahassee, Fla. By Photo by Matias J. Ocner

    NO. 3: WHEN OBAMACARE TAX CREDITS EXPIRE, DON’T EXPECT MEDICAID TO FILL THE GAP IN FLORIDA

    As Congress fights over the future of Affordable Care Act subsidies, the healthcare of millions of Floridians is on the line. | Published October 17, 2025 | Read Full Story by Romy Ellenbogen

    The summary above was drafted with the help of AI tools and edited by journalists in our News division. All stories listed were reported, written and edited by McClatchy journalists.

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  • The whooping cough vaccine works, doctors say

    Days after announcing a push to end Florida’s school vaccine mandates, state Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo questioned the whooping cough vaccine’s effectiveness.

    In a Sept. 7 interview on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Ladapo told host Jake Tapper that his department didn’t study how ending the vaccine requirements could affect children’s health or future outbreaks.

    “Absolutely not,” Ladapo responded, before referring to whooping cough vaccines. “That’s an example of a vaccine that is ineffective. The data show that it’s ineffective at preventing transmission.”

    Pertussis, or whooping cough, is a highly contagious bacterial infection that can cause uncontrollable coughing fits. Its common name comes from the sound of infected infants and children make when they try to catch their breath in between coughs.

    Like many vaccines, the DTaP vaccine — which stands for diphtheria, tetanus and acellular pertussis — is not a perfect barrier, but it significantly lowers the risk of severe disease.

    The DTaP vaccine is 98% effective in children within a year of their last dose, and about 71% effective five years after the last dose, according to guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    “The core misunderstanding here is making perfect the enemy of the good,” said Dr. Christoph Diasio, a pediatrician at Sandhills Pediatrics in North Carolina. “We would love a 100% perfect magic shield against pertussis — the vaccine protection does wane, it’s not perfect — but that doesn’t mean that it is useless. It is much much better to get protection from the vaccine rather than to be totally vulnerable to a disease so terrible you can break ribs.”

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    The acellular pertussis vaccine used in the U.S. since the 1990s is less effective at preventing transmission than its whole-cell predecessor, studies have shown. But widespread vaccination — which school vaccine mandates are based on — reduces overall transmission by lowering the number of susceptible people. 

    “The whole-cell pertussis vaccine, while more effective, also caused more side effects because it had more antigens in it,” Dr. Jason Terk, a pediatrician at Cook Children’s Health Care System in Texas, said. “The 5 cents of truth in his statement relates to it being comparatively less effective than what we used to use.”

    Emily Oster, a health economist and founder of ParentData, said Ladapo’s statement about the vaccine’s effectiveness regarding transmission is “broadly” true, but noted that the rationale for school vaccination rules is that viruses have trouble getting a foothold when more people are vaccinated.

    “The vaccine is very protective against infection in individuals,” Oster wrote by email. “Yes, it is true that if someone DID get infected they might pass it along, but if the virus is constantly running into people with vaccination, it will die.”

    PolitiFact reached out to Florida’s health department about Ladapo’s comment but did not hear back by publication.

    How the vaccine works 

    Whooping cough can be extremely serious in babies and young children, causing vomiting, pneumonia, convulsions, apnea, brain damage or death. Infants can turn blue during coughing spells because of lack of oxygen. In teens and adults, the disease can cause weight loss, bladder control loss and passing out. Severe coughing can cause rib fractures.

    Doctors typically administer the combination DTaP vaccine in five doses to patients from infancy through early childhood to help build up immunity and ensure protection doesn’t fade. Different vaccines against the diseases are available for older children, adolescents and adults.

    Before pertussis vaccines became available in the 1940s, the condition was one of the more common childhood diseases in the U.S. Each year, as many as 200,000 children got sick and around 9,000 died, according to the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases.

    Once the vaccine came to market, case numbers decreased through the 1980s by more than 90% compared with the pre-vaccine era.

    A vaccine shift over safety 

    In the 1990s, the U.S. switched to an acellular vaccine, which contains fragments of a pathogen, because it had fewer side effects and still provided coverage. (Whole-cell versions contain the entire pathogen.)

    After pertussis cases began to increase gradually in the early 2000s, researchers looked into the cause and found that the acellular vaccine is not as protective as the previous whole-cell version, with some evidence that the immune response wanes more quickly. (As a result, an additional dose is now recommended around 11 and 12 years old.)

    There could be other factors that explain the uptick: The disease is more quickly detected and recognized, patients have greater access to laboratory diagnostics, and surveillance and health department reporting is stronger.

    Some studies have also shown families increasingly using school vaccination exemptions or declining routine vaccines.

    “The easier it is to get non-medical exemptions, the greater the number of unvaccinated children will be, increasing the likelihood of pertussis outbreaks in schools and communities,” Richard Gilligan, the former director of the Clinical Microbiology-Immunology Laboratories at the University of North Carolina Hospitals, wrote in a 2022 analysis. “School age students can bring this highly contagious organism home and infect non-boosted parents and unvaccinated siblings, especially infants.”

    Oster also referred to research that found states that offer personal belief exemptions, and more easily granted exemptions, were associated with increased whooping cough cases. In Florida, parents can exempt their children from vaccine mandates on medical or religious grounds.

    In his report, Gilligan also pointed to the emergence of new pertussis strains, which can result in vaccinated people becoming infected but remaining asymptomatic and able to transmit the disease.

    One 2022 paper that looked at different pertussis immunization practices around the world said that selecting which vaccine to use should be weighed against effectiveness, likelihood of adverse events, cost and pertussis surveillance in the community.

    “The vaccine lessens transmission, it doesn’t eliminate it, just like influenza, RSV, rotavirus vaccines — they lessen transmission,” said Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. “With SARS-CoV-2, (the virus that causes COVID-19), which is similar, if you lived in a highly vaccinated area, you were much less likely to get the disease even if you weren’t vaccinated.”

    Ultimately, health officials decided that the safety benefits of the acellular pertussis vaccine outweighed the more effective, more reactive whole-cell version. It still offered protection, they said, particularly in shared spaces like schools, when most children were vaccinated.

    “There have been no serious safety signals in the 30 years since the DTaP vaccination has been on the market,” Terk, the Texas pediatrician, said.

    In Florida, the school requirement for the DTaP vaccine for will stay put for now. The state health department told The Associated Press it submitted a rule change Sept. 3 to remove vaccine requirements for chickenpox, hepatitis B, Haemophilus influenza type b (Hib), and pneumococcal diseases for schoolchildren. That’s expected to go into effect around December 2025.

    Other vaccines, such as those for measles, polio and whooping cough will require legislative action to be removed. Florida lawmakers aren’t scheduled to meet again until January 2026.

    RELATED:  Every school vaccine mandate “drips” with “slavery.”

    RELATED: Do pediatricians recommend vaccines to make a profit? There’s not much money there. 

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  • Florida is right to end vaccine mandates. We should ban them nationally, too. | Your Turn

    I was vaccinated when I was a child but no longer get vaccines as an adult. I do not believe vaccines are safe in the dosages and frequencies that are currently mandated.

    I feel that if a woman has control and choice for an abortion, then I should have the same freedoms in regard to vaccines. If the government supports “choice” for one thing, it should support “choice” for all.

    I fully support Florida’s surgeon general in his efforts to end vaccine mandates. Also, we should be following the science as we should be in all cases of various health issues. I think the science for vaccines has shown that we are overvaccinating ourselves, and until science generated from a nonpolitical research facility determines just what vaccines we should consider, I believe that everyone should be allowed to choose if they want a vaccine or not.

    I would like my home state of New Jersey to follow Florida in ending mandates, though I would prefer that it become federal. It is so confusing when one state does something one way and another state does it differently. Or, God forbid, when a city in a state does it one way but a small county seat in the same state does it differently.

    Send us your thoughts: Florida looks to ban vaccine mandates. Do you agree? Are shots safe? | Opinion Forum

    We need federal law on vaccine mandates

    There are many things that need to be standardized at the local level, cost for trash pickup, for example. There are many things that need to be standardized at the state level, such as speed limits. Then there are things that need to be standardized at the federal level. I believe that this issue should be standardized at the federal level to prevent confusion and chaos.

    I agree with RFK Jr.: We were lied to about COVID. But his overreaction may hurt us. | Opinion

    Here are a few examples why: A high school student moves from one state to another. In his birth state, vaccines were voluntary; however, in his new state all students are required to have a certain vaccine before entering fifth grade. The student is in high school and tests have shown that this hypothetical vaccine causes a type of reaction or illness in older students. What does this student do?

    I can also see some states saying that in order to play against our schools in sports, all players have to have a certain vaccine. But what if a team from right across the state boundary has voluntary vaccination? Without federal law being implemented to cover vaccine mandates, things like this will disrupt society needlessly.

    We have so many things that disrupt society in today’s world. We don’t need another.

    — Dwayne Bonker, Hammonton, New Jersey

    This piece was submitted as part of USA TODAY’s Forum, a new space for conversation. See what we’re talking about at usatoday.com/forum and share your perspective at forum@usatoday.com.

    Do you want to take part in our next Forum? Join the conversation by emailing forum@usatoday.com.You can also follow us on X, formerly Twitter, @usatodayopinion and sign up for our Opinion newsletter to stay updated on future Forum posts.

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Florida is right about vaccines. End mandates nationwide | Opinion

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  • Florida’s Proposed Vaccine Rollback: Why Every Parent Should Care

    On September 3, 2025, Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo announced plans to . At the press conference, he even compared mandates to “slavery.”

    If finalized, Florida would become the first state in the nation to completely roll back school vaccine mandates. Administrative and legislative steps are still required, but the direction is clear. And announcements like this matter: even before laws change, they shape perception—and perception alone can lower vaccination rates before policy ever does.

    For decades, Florida, like every other state, has required immunizations for school entry. This isn’t a minor tweak; it’s a reversal of long-standing precedent. And to be clear, this isn’t about COVID vaccines. It’s about the routine immunizations, including measles, polio, chickenpox, and whooping cough, that have kept classrooms safe for generations.

    Why vaccine mandates exist

    Vaccine requirements aren’t about control. They exist because contagious diseases don’t stop with one child. They don’t stop at your front door. And they don’t stop at state lines.

    Think of them like seatbelts or smoke alarms: you don’t think much about them until the day they save a life. Removing them doesn’t create freedom. It strips away protection, not just for one child, but for entire communities.

    No vaccine is 100% effective. But when most children in a classroom are vaccinated, germs run out of room to spread. Take away that safety net, and illnesses can move quickly through schools, homes, and communities.

    When mandates disappear, history shows what follows: coverage drops, outbreaks rise, and the consequences spill far beyond the families who opt out.

    Why every parent should care

    A common question is, “But my child is vaccinated, why should I worry?

    Here’s why:

    • Babies and immunocompromised kids can’t always be vaccinated. They rely on the rest of us for protection.

    • Schools are high-risk settings. Children share air, food, and play for six hours or more a day. Measles can linger in the air for two hours after a sick child leaves.

    • Outbreaks don’t stay local. With travel, tourism, and sports, diseases cross borders faster than laws can keep up.

    And this isn’t just theoretical. cases are at their highest since the disease was declared eradicated in 2000. Just a few unvaccinated children in one school can spark dozens of cases.

    This is bigger than Florida. States are moving in opposite directions, some strengthening protections, others rolling them back, leaving families, teachers, and doctors caught in what many are calling a public health “civil war.”

    What happens when coverage slips

    Rolling back mandates doesn’t just change numbers on a chart. It creates ripple effects families feel in daily life:

    • Exemptions rise. What was rare becomes routine.

    • Clusters form. Outbreaks don’t need every child unvaccinated, just enough in one school or community.

    • Exclusions multiply. Schools must send home unvaccinated children after exposures, sometimes for weeks.

    • Families scramble. More sick days, more ER visits, more bills.

    • Systems strain. Pediatricians, school nurses, and teachers absorb the fallout.

    For a healthy child, measles might mean a miserable week. For a baby too young for shots or a child with leukemia, it could mean hospitalization, or worse. That’s the unfair truth: when coverage dips, the most vulnerable pay the highest price.

    How herd immunity works

    Think of herd immunity as a chain-link fence.

    Each vaccinated child is a link. A missing link here or there? The fence still holds. But remove panel after panel, and the fence collapses, letting germs walk right in.

    For measles, about 95% of kids need to be vaccinated to keep that fence strong. Yet U.S. kindergarten rates are already slipping below that threshold in many areas. In Florida, coverage has fallen into the high 80s, with nearly 5% of children exempt through non-medical reasons.

    Take away mandates, and those gaps widen. And when the fence weakens, it’s not just unvaccinated families who feel it. The impact ripples out to daycares, nursing facilities, and homes with newborns or loved ones.

    What families can do

    This proposal isn’t law yet, which means voices matter. Families still have time to speak up.

    • Parents can ask schools how they’ll handle safety if mandates disappear.

    • Families and teachers can share concerns with state representatives.

    • Personal stories, whether from parents, teachers, or healthcare workers, help lawmakers understand what’s at stake.

    History shows local policy does shift when communities raise their voices. Public pressure matters, and lawmakers know it.

    Final thoughts

    This isn’t just about Florida. It’s about what kind of communities we want for our kids.

    Removing mandates doesn’t restore choice, it removes protection. It doesn’t strengthen freedom, it weakens safety nets. And the people most affected will be the ones with the least margin: newborns, kids with chronic illnesses, teachers already stretched thin, families already carrying too much.

    But here’s the hope: these proposals aren’t finalized. Parents, teachers, and pediatricians still have a chance to use their voices. Lawmakers do listen, especially when they hear from the communities they represent.

    For my personal reflections, as both a pediatrician and a parent in Florida, plus answers to common questions, and ready-to-use scripts and letters to help families take action locally, read the full (free) .

    Protecting children’s health shouldn’t depend on politics. It should simply be the standard.

    Let’s keep the fence intact.

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  • Maryland to protect access to vaccines with flu season approaching – WTOP News

    In the midst of states thinking about removing vaccine mandates, Maryland will protect access to vaccines for all of its residents with flu season approaching.

    With some states thinking about removing vaccine mandates, Maryland will protect access to vaccines for all of its residents with flu season approaching.

    Maryland residents can go to their providers and pharmacies to get their vaccinations, and get advice on what types of vaccines to get to protect themselves from viruses and illnesses.

    The CDC recommends to those 6 years and older to get the flu shot.

    This comes in the midst of the Food and Drug Administration approving updated COVID-19 shots from Pfizer, Moderna and Novavax, which is limited for some kids and adults with one high-risk health condition.

    “The federal government’s rapid changes and unnecessary swirl around vaccine policy is harmful for Marylanders and all Americans, and could result in disastrous public health outcomes,” Maryland Gov. Wes Moore said in a release.

    Moore added that the state is prepared to deal with the challenges of federal vaccine guidance with U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. trying to advance anti-vaccine policies.

    He signed a law in 2024 that would allow pharmacists to give those 3 years and over COVID-19 and flu vaccine without a prescription, a release said.

    “The health, safety and well-being of Marylanders and their loved ones are our North Star, and we will do everything in our power to ensure they have access to life-saving medicines like vaccines,” Moore said.

    Massachusetts is following Maryland’s playbook in protecting vaccine access for its residents, despite Florida being on the verge of being the first state to to get rid of school vaccine mandates.

    About 8 in 10 U.S. adults said kids should be vaccinated to go to school, according to a Harvard/SSRS poll.

    “Vaccines continue to be one of the most powerful public health tools for safeguarding our people and communities against disease,” Maryland Department of Health Secretary Dr. Meena Seshamani said.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Tadiwos Abedje

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  • Florida to drop all vaccine requirements

    The US state of Florida is planning to drop all vaccination requirements, including routine childhood shots for measles, diphtheria, and other life-threatening illnesses.

    Florida’s surgeon general said “all vaccine mandates” would end because “every last one drips… with disdain and slavery.” It would make Florida the only US state to lack vaccine requirements for school attendance. The country’s leadership is increasingly vaccine-skeptical: Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr has repeatedly voiced concerns about the impacts of immunizations.

    Yet there is a growing divide between states on the issue, with California, Oregon, and Washington — all solidly Democratic — announcing a “health alliance” that would make vaccine recommendations separately from federal agencies, while some Northeastern states are considering a similar effort.

    A chart showing the number of lives saved globally by child vaccinations.

    Tom Chivers

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  • Florida plans to end vaccine mandates statewide, including for schoolchildren

    (CNN) — Florida will move to end all vaccine mandates in the state, Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo announced Wednesday.

    The move would make Florida the first state to end a longstanding – and constitutionally upheld – practice of requiring certain vaccines for school students.

    The state health department will immediately move to end all non-statutory mandates in the state, Ladapo said at a news conference. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who was also at the event, said state lawmakers would then look into developing a legislative package to end any remaining mandates.

    Ladapo said that every vaccine mandate “is wrong and drips with disdain and slavery.”

    All 50 states have had school immunization requirements since the beginning of the 1980s, with incoming kindergartners needing shots to protect against diseases including measles, polio and tetanus. No states require a Covid-19 vaccine for schoolchildren.

    All states allow medical exemptions from these school vaccine mandates, and most also allow for exemptions due to personal or religious beliefs. Exemption rates have been on the rise for years in the US, with a record share of incoming kindergartners skipping the required shots in the 2024-25 school year.

    Florida’s school vaccine exemption rate last school year– about 5% – was higher than the national average, data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows, and nearly all were for nonmedical reasons.

    “We are concerned that today’s announcement will put children in Florida public schools at higher risk for getting sick, which will have a ripple effect across our communities,” Dr. Rana Alissa, president of the Florida Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said in a statement.

    “For many kids, the best part of school is being with friends – sharing space, playing on the playground, and learning together. Close contact makes it easy for contagious diseases to spread quickly,” she said. “When everyone in a school is vaccinated, it is harder for diseases to spread and easier for everyone to continue learning and having fun. When children are sick and miss school caregivers also miss work, which not only impacts those families but also the local economy.”

    study published last year by the CDC estimated that routine childhood vaccinations – such as those included in school mandates – will have prevented about 508 million illnesses, 32 million hospitalizations and 1,129,000 deaths among children born between 1994 and 2003. They also were estimated to avert $540 billion in direct costs.

    Ladapo said that vaccination should be an individual choice.

    “People have a right to make their own decisions, informed decisions,” he said. “What you put into your body is because of your relationship with your body and your god. I don’t have that right. Government does not have that right.”

    But experts say that freedom comes with responsibilities.

    “We’re all routinely subject to rules that enable us to live together safely, and I personally want those rules in place to protect me and the people I care about. We abide by speed limits, traffic lights, infant car seat and seatbelt laws – all requirements that have expanded over the years as safety technology and engineering has improved,” said Dr. Kelly Moore, president and CEO of immunize.org, a nonprofit organization focused on vaccine access.

    “I share with many other people the belief that all children who are required to attend school should also have a right to the best possible defense from vaccine-preventable diseases while they are there,” she said.

    Some vaccine mandates in Florida can be rolled back unilaterally by the state health department, Ladapo said, but others will require coordination with lawmakers.

    Experts who oppose the move to end vaccine mandates emphasize that the change is not final and that timing is critical.

    With the announcement coming after the start of the school year, Floridians will have a chance to experience and reflect on what a year of low vaccination coverage looks like, Moore said.

    “This timing gives leaders several months to reconsider whether this is what’s best for Florida families. It’s quite likely that Floridians will have reasons to regret that decision as time goes by and outbreaks disrupt learning,” she said.

    The American Medical Association “strongly opposes” the plan to end vaccine mandates, Dr. Sandra Adamson Fryhofer, an internal medicine physician and member of the professional organization’s board of trustees, said in a statement.

    “This unprecedented rollback would undermine decades of public health progress and place children and communities at increased risk for diseases such as measles, mumps, polio, and chickenpox resulting in serious illness, disability, and even death,” she said. “While there is still time, we urge Florida to reconsider this change to help prevent a rise of infectious disease outbreaks that put health and lives at risk.”

    Deidre McPhillips, Shawn Nottingham and CNN

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  • Physicians for Informed Consent States, ‘Chicken Pox (Varicella) Vaccine Has Not Been Proven Safer Than Chicken Pox’

    Physicians for Informed Consent States, ‘Chicken Pox (Varicella) Vaccine Has Not Been Proven Safer Than Chicken Pox’

    Free educational materials help parents make better-informed vaccination decisions

    Physicians for Informed Consent (PIC) has introduced two new educational documents, “Varicella (Chicken Pox): What Parents Need to Know” and “Varicella Vaccine: Is It Safer Than Chicken Pox?” The educational materials include key scientific data on the risks of chicken pox as well as the risks of the varicella vaccine, assisting parents in making a more informed risk-benefit calculation for vaccination.

    “Now, more than ever, parents are motivated to learn more about the risks of childhood infections and their respective vaccines — and they want to know the numbers,” said Dr. Shira Miller, founder and president of Physicians for Informed Consent. “Although many parents remember from experience that chicken pox is generally benign, as the chicken pox vaccine is required for childcare and school attendance in all states, and with no religious or personal belief exemption in five states, including California, we’re pleased to now make available for free a Disease Information Statement and Vaccine Risk Statement for chicken pox.”

    Important facts from the Varicella (Chicken Pox) Disease Information Statement (DIS) are as follows:

    • More than 96% of new varicella infections are benign (1) and not reported to public health departments.
    • Fatal cases of varicella are rare in the United States. Before the introduction of the varicella vaccination program, one in 40,000 or 0.003% of varicella cases were fatal.
    • Because varicella resolves on its own in almost all cases, usually only rest and hydration are necessary.
    • Immune globulin is available to treat immunocompromised patients who are exposed to chicken pox, such as those on chemotherapy.

    Key facts from the Varicella (Chicken Pox) Vaccine Risk Statement (VRS) are as follows:

    • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) states, “It is not known how long a vaccinated person is protected against varicella.”
    • The Institute of Medicine has not ruled out the possibility that varicella vaccination can lead to stroke as well as several neurological and autoimmune disorders, including encephalopathy, cerebellar ataxia, transverse myelitis, Guillain-Barré syndrome, small fiber neuropathy, arthropathy, and thrombocytopenia.
    • A study published in The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal shows the varicella vaccine may cause permanent injury 44 times more often than fatal varicella.
    • The chicken pox (varicella) vaccine has not been proven safer than chicken pox.

    To safeguard children’s health, parents need access to balanced educational information on infectious diseases and vaccines. PIC makes scientific data freely available through its education program, a growing collection of concise, reader-friendly educational materials that support parents, physicians, and policymakers in calculating the risk-benefit ratio of vaccination. To read the newest DIS and VRS documents on chicken pox and the varicella vaccine, visit physiciansforinformedconsent.org/varicella.

    (1) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Epidemiology and prevention of vaccine-preventable diseases. 13th ed. Hamborsky J, Kroger A, Wolfe S, editors. Washington, D.C.: Public Health Foundation; 2015. 359, Appendix E5. https://physiciansforinformedconsent.org/cdc-pink-book-13th-
    edition-and-appendix-e-2015-combo; “in the early 1990s, annually there were about 4 million cases, of which about 150,000 (3.75%) were reported.”

    Source: Physicians for Informed Consent

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  • Physicians for Informed Consent Challenges the Basis for COVID-19 Vaccine Mandates

    Physicians for Informed Consent Challenges the Basis for COVID-19 Vaccine Mandates

    According to Physicians for Informed Consent, new data raise serious concerns over the risks of hospitalization in people vaccinated with the COVID-19 vaccine.

    Press Release


    Nov 11, 2022 14:01 PST

    Physicians for Informed Consent (PIC) has released an update to its educational document “COVID-19 Vaccine Mandates: 21 Scientific Facts That Challenge the Assumptions.” Developed from data compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, National Library of Medicine, and other established sources, the PIC document covers issues of critical importance to both the medical community and the public. Reflecting key scientific research, the document refutes the basis for COVID-19 vaccine mandates. For example, according to Physicians for Informed Consent, studies (referenced here) show: 

    • COVID-19 vaccines may increase the risk of hospitalizations in vaccinated people.

    A study published in Vaccine found that the number of serious adverse events in people vaccinated with the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine is higher than the number of COVID-19 hospitalizations prevented. For every two COVID-19 hospitalizations prevented in vaccinated people, there are 10 COVID-19 vaccine serious adverse events.

    • COVID-19 vaccines increase the risk of myocarditis in young men.

    A study published in Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety shows that in males aged 18 to 24 years, the risk of myocarditis is 1 in 1,862 after the second dose of a COVID-19 mRNA vaccine.

    • COVID-19 vaccines increase the risk of cardiac-related deaths in men.

    A study by the Florida Department of Health found there is a 97% increased risk of cardiac-related deaths in males aged 18-39 within 28 days of being vaccinated with a COVID-19 vaccine.

    • COVID-19 vaccines increase the length of menstrual cycles in women.

    A study published in BMJ found that in women, vaccination with two doses within the same menstrual cycle leads to a 3.7-day increase in that cycle’s length. The consequences of this phenomenon are not known.

    It can take months or even years for new data to reach the general medical community. As such, some healthcare providers may be unaware of COVID-19 vaccine facts and figures. In providing this document, PIC highlights important statistics to help medical professionals and their patients more easily assess the risks of the vaccine compared to the risks of COVID-19. In addition, as a nonprofit organization with headquarters in California — where AB 2098, a doctor-censorship bill, was recently signed into law — PIC asserts that it is now more important than ever for the general public to be able to access science-based COVID-19 analyses. 

    “AB 2098 is immoral and anti-science,” said Dr. Shira Miller, founder and president of Physicians for Informed Consent. “PIC as an organization will continue speaking out and educating the public about COVID-19, COVID-19 vaccines, and the need to have doctors whose professional opinion hasn’t been censored — because without free speech informed consent is not possible.”

    To read all 21 scientific facts in PIC’s newly released document, visit physiciansforinformedconsent.org/covid-19-vaccines

    Source: Physicians for Informed Consent

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