lifestyle

This woman is a danger to children. And she's coming to Australia.

 

A dangerous person is coming to Australia.

When she gets here, she will speak in public places to enthralled groups of supporters. She will spread a dangerous message.

And it’s perfectly possible that this message could end lives.

This woman is not a terrorist, but she is an extremist.

In March, prominent American anti-vaccination campaigner, Sherri Tenpenny is scheduled to give a series of seminars in Australia designed to encourage parents to not vaccinate their children.

In these seminars being promoted by the Australian Vaccination Skeptics Network, Sherri Tenpenny will apparently speak about “the truths about vaccination risks”, “your rights regarding vaccinations for child care and school”, and “how to keep babies and children healthy according to nature”.

Look at this: the devastating effect of anti-vaxxers on the world.

Sherri Tenpenny is an osteopathic medical doctor from Ohio in the United States. Her website says that she provides “vaccine information you won’t hear from your paediatrician”. She claims to be “an outspoken advocate for…the right to refuse vaccination.” In addition, she “offers hope through her unique treatments” for patients who have been “vaccine-injured.”

She is on the record as objecting to childhood vaccinations, as well as Gardasil (the Australian-made vaccine that prevents the  human papillomavirus, a major cause of cervical cancer), and the flu shot.

ADVERTISEMENT

But perhaps the best demonstration of her views is the tshirts that she sells on her website.

There’s a tshirt for parents who want to celebrate “sparing” their children from vaccines:

Tshirt reads: “I didn’t deny my children vaccines. I spared them.” (via)

 There’s one for an unvaccinated child:

Tshirt reads: “Look at me! I’m vaccine free!”

 And there’s a tshirt for every person who hates facts:

Tshirt reads: “FACT: 1 in 50 Autism overall. FACT: 1 in 25,000 unvaccinated. Prove me wrong.”

There is a reason why the nonsense that Sherri Tenpenny spouts is not akin to the information that you’ll receive from your doctor.

It’s because it not credible. It’s lies. Misinformation and manipulation.

Science has repeatedly proven that immunisation does not cause autism.

Another win for science: Anti-vaxxer’s claims ruled “misleading and deceptive”.

A University of Sydney study involving more than 1.25 million children concluded that there was no evidence to support a relationship between common vaccines for measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria, tetanus and whooping cough and the development of autism.

But what science has also told us is that failure to immunise causes disease, disability and death.

ADVERTISEMENT

NSW saw a spike in measles infections from early 2012 to late 2012.

In the past five years, three babies from New South Wales have died from whooping cough — all were unvaccinated. More than 1500 infants in NSW were diagnosed in 2014 with the potentially life-threatening, but vaccine-preventable, disease.

6 things to say when you’re faced with anti-vaccination rhetoric.

The pro-vaccination group Stop the Australian Vaccination Network and pro-vaccination campaigner, Reasonable Hank, are encouraging people to write to the Health Minister, health departments and the commercial venues that are hosting Sherri Tenpenny’s lectures to protest Tenpenny’s dangerous campaign. The details of this campaign are here.

But the Australian Government has an opportunity to go further. Specifically, the new Immigration Minister (and former Health Minister), Peter Dutton has an opportunity to take a stand against deadly misinformation and the people that peddle it.

He can make sure Sherri Tenpenny never enters the country.

Mr Dutton has the power to refuse a visa to travel to Australia on the basis that the person fails a test of character. Last year, Scott Morrison used this character test to cancel the visa of so-called ‘pick-up artist’ Julien Blanc for “putting a view that was derogatory to women”.

New Minister for Immigration and Border Protection, Peter Dutton (via his website)

ADVERTISEMENT

Visas can be refused or cancelled by the Minister if they are satisfied that the person ‘represents a danger to the Australian community’, ‘would incite discord in Australia’ or is otherwise not of good character.

In making a decision on this issue, the law requires that Minister take into account the best interests of minors  in Australia.

Let’s be clear: Sherri Tenpenny represents a danger to Australian children.

She encourages people to reject scientific principles and to put their children, other children and the wider community at risk from deadly diseases. Rejection of immunisation is, quite literally, a matter of life and death.

On several measures, Sherri Tenpenny fails the character test. In the same way that Julien Blanc’s misogynistic ‘pick-up’ tips were a danger to women in the is country, Tenpenny is a danger to its children and the Australian community.

We call on the Minister for Immigration to reject Sherri Tenpenny’s application for a visa to travel in Australia and ensure that her misinformation and lies do not threaten the lives of children in this country.

As a community, if we value the lives of children, we must have zero tolerance for misinformation about vaccinations. That means, we must have zero tolerance for the views espoused by Sherri Tenpenny.

As Immigration Minister, Peter Dutton can and must send this message.

Want to do something about it?

You can contact Minister Dutton and encourage him to refuse Sherri Tenpenny’s visa. His email address is: minister@immi.gov.au or peter.dutton.mp@aph.gov.au and his Ministerial Office phone number is: (02) 6277 7220.

You can contact the Minister for Health about this issue and encourage her to speak to the Minister for Immigration about the importance of refusing a visa to Sherri Tenpenny. The Minister’s email address is sussan.ley.mp@aph.gov.au or farrer@aph.gov.au and her Ministerial Office phone number is: (02) 6277 7630

You can contact the commercial venues that are hosting Sherri Tenpenny’s seminars and let them know how you feel about it. Reasonable Hank has collated the names of the venues and their email addresses at the bottom of the page here.

Follow Mamamia on Facebook

At Mamamia absolutely everything is up for discussion: from pop culture to politics, body image to motherhood, feminism to fashion. We unashamedly cover what everyone is talking about today: whether that’s stories which will make you laugh out loud, cover your mouth in shock, help you get informed or start you thinking about an issue in a different way and sometimes, we help you to just switch off the brain power from a few sweet minutes and kick back.