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Not vaccinated? Find another doctor.

A growing number of doctors in the United States are telling families to find another clinic if they refuse vaccinations for their children. In some states as many as one fifth or one third of medical doctors are flexing their muscle and telling belligerent parents they’re ‘fired’.

It’s a controversial move that’s raising questions about what should be done in a country where the rate of vaccination is around 70 per cent but varies drastically from vaccine to vaccine. The Wall Street Journal reports:

“In a study of Connecticut pediatricians published last year, some 30% of 133 doctors said they had asked a family to leave their practice for vaccine refusal, and a recent survey of 909 Midwestern pediatricians found that 21% reported discharging families for the same reason.

By comparison, in 2001 and 2006 about 6% of physicians said they “routinely” stopped working with families due to parents’ continued vaccine refusal and 16% “sometimes” dismissed them, according to surveys conducted then by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

 

Mamamia spoke to the President of the Australian Medical Association Dr Steve Hambleton to ask whether a similar desire to ‘fire’ parents existed here.

“That’s not really something that occurs here at all,” he said.

“Australia has a good vaccination rate around 90 per cent, that used to be 60 per cent so we’ve made big gains with good public education campaigns. We have a lot of support for our vaccination programs.

“Of course there are individuals in every area who choose not to vaccinate. We have conscientious objector forms for these people which they can fill out and not have to get immunised for themselves or their kids.”

While repeating the AMA would never have a policy which required doctors to move vaccine-objectors along, Dr Hambleton said he was extremely concerned about the glut of misinformation in the market about vaccines.

“I am absolutely worried about some people in the anti-vaccination movement, yes,” he said.

“People who claim to be an authority on the subject matter, people who claim to be experts on vaccines … well, all I can say is you really need to look at their credentials.

“There has been a sustained and clear distortion of the evidence relating to vaccine safety in Australia and I must say to anybody in this area, you need to look at these things dispassionately.”

One legal case bringing some of the vaccination issues to a head will be heard in New South Wales next week.

The Australian Vaccination Network (AVN), frequently referred to as the Anti-Vaccination Network, will appear in the New South Wales Supreme Court challenging the public warning and report issued by the NSW Health Care Complaints Commission (HCCC).

The HCCC found that the AVN:

  • provides information that is solely anti-vaccination
  • contains information that is incorrect and misleading
  • quotes selectively from research to suggest that vaccination may be dangerous.

The AVN is also fighting a separate battle with the NSW Office of Liquor, Gaming and Racing (OLGR) which revoked the charity status of the AVN after it identified possible breaches. That case is pending, awaiting the outcome from the Supreme Court case.

Mamamia will be attending that case.

What do you think about doctors refusing to treat families who reject vaccinations?

Top Comments

Rachel 12 years ago

My husband is a GP and we have a one year old child. At this age a child cannot be fully immunised. I wish my husband would refuse to treat the people who selfishly refuse to vaccinate. It's bad enough that he constantly brings home colds and infects the family - I don't want my child catching any other nasties. (Though fully immunised, an adult can still transmit some diseases, though it is much less likely.)


August 13 years ago

Hi Rick
Just found this via Medical Observer's twitter feed. Thought it might be of interest.
Vaccine Hesitancy: Understanding Parents’ Concerns and the Impact of Anti-Vaccine Rhetoric
http://vicnetwork.org/2012/...