WHO Call Antivaksin Groups As Global Health Threats
WHO Call Antivaksin Groups As Global Health Threats
The World Health Organization (WHO) calls the group reject vaccination or antivaxx as one of the main threats to global health in 2019
The World Health Organization or WHO calls vaccine doubt or reluctance or refusal to vaccinate even though there is availability or often called antivaxx as one of the main threats to global health in 2019. Every year the WHO publishes a list of 10 biggest threats to world health to establish the agenda for the next 12 months.
While 2 to 3 million deaths are prevented each year, that number can be much higher. "More than 1.5 million can be avoided if global vaccination coverage increases," the group said.
According to the WHO vaccine advisory group, self-satisfaction, discomfort in accessing vaccines and lack of self-confidence are the main reasons why people miss vaccinations. In the United States, those who miss vaccinations for themselves or their children often cite religious reasons, or the wrong idea that vaccines lead to autism.
Meanwhile, the Centers for Disease Control said there was no scientific relationship between vaccines and autism. WHO also said that choosing not to vaccinate threatened to reverse the progress made in tackling vaccine-preventable diseases. Over the past few decades, several diseases such as polio and measles are considered eradicated in countries where vaccines are available have experienced a resurgence because people have begun to refuse vaccination.
"Measles, for example, has experienced a 30% increase in the global case. The reason for this increase is very complex, and not all of these cases are caused by vaccine doubts. However, some countries that have almost eliminated this disease have experienced a resurgence, "said the WHO as reported by Health.
Nine other global health threats on the WHO list are air pollution and climate change, non-communicable diseases, global influenza pandemics, vulnerable and vulnerable arrangements, antimicrobial resistance, Ebola and other high-threat pathogens, weak primary health care, dengue fever and HIV.
To overcome the increasing level of vaccine doubt, WHO plans to go ahead with the aim of eliminating cervical cancer with a more sophisticated application of the HPV vaccine.
The World Health Organization (WHO) calls the group reject vaccination or antivaxx as one of the main threats to global health in 2019
The World Health Organization or WHO calls vaccine doubt or reluctance or refusal to vaccinate even though there is availability or often called antivaxx as one of the main threats to global health in 2019. Every year the WHO publishes a list of 10 biggest threats to world health to establish the agenda for the next 12 months.
While 2 to 3 million deaths are prevented each year, that number can be much higher. "More than 1.5 million can be avoided if global vaccination coverage increases," the group said.
According to the WHO vaccine advisory group, self-satisfaction, discomfort in accessing vaccines and lack of self-confidence are the main reasons why people miss vaccinations. In the United States, those who miss vaccinations for themselves or their children often cite religious reasons, or the wrong idea that vaccines lead to autism.
Meanwhile, the Centers for Disease Control said there was no scientific relationship between vaccines and autism. WHO also said that choosing not to vaccinate threatened to reverse the progress made in tackling vaccine-preventable diseases. Over the past few decades, several diseases such as polio and measles are considered eradicated in countries where vaccines are available have experienced a resurgence because people have begun to refuse vaccination.
"Measles, for example, has experienced a 30% increase in the global case. The reason for this increase is very complex, and not all of these cases are caused by vaccine doubts. However, some countries that have almost eliminated this disease have experienced a resurgence, "said the WHO as reported by Health.
Nine other global health threats on the WHO list are air pollution and climate change, non-communicable diseases, global influenza pandemics, vulnerable and vulnerable arrangements, antimicrobial resistance, Ebola and other high-threat pathogens, weak primary health care, dengue fever and HIV.
To overcome the increasing level of vaccine doubt, WHO plans to go ahead with the aim of eliminating cervical cancer with a more sophisticated application of the HPV vaccine.
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