Wednesday, 29 May 2002 11:19 pm
Member name:   Password:   
home
about us
register online
nz education
kids
parents
events
links
whats new
discussion
faq
contact
  Information Search
  Education information
General NZ Education(8)
Pre-school Info.(5)
Primary/Intermediate Schools(7)
Associations(5)
Secondary Schools(4)
Tertiary(3)
Adult Education Area(1)
Special Needs.(8)
Teaching (3)
Profess Development(2)
Gifted/Talented Educ(9)
Scholarships(2)
Apprenticeships(2)
ICT(4)
Courses(1)
Conferences(1)
Parents + Families (3)
Maori(3)
Distance Education(2)
Education News(2)
  Latest information
Phonological Awareness.
27 May 2002
Tertiary Education Bill
26 May 2002
New Zealand Dyspraxia Assoc
26 May 2002
Freedom or Discipline?
25 May 2002
Boost for M�ori Teachers.
24 May 2002
  What's new?
New Institute of Education
The Knowledge Breakfast-TVNZ
Well City Donates 400 Pc
Principals Learn
Special Education
New early Childhood Resource
  Latest classifieds
Computer PIII 1GB
>> more classifieds
  Take our poll
What features should be included in this website?
school information
tally: 42% 42%
educational material
tally: 40% 40%
roll applications
tally: 5% 5%
general articles
tally: 14% 14%
More Polls
  Online mailing list
Text HTML
Newsletter archives
  edusearch articles
You are here > Sections > Primary/Intermediate Schools > Examining the case for immunisation

print this article

Examining the case for immunisation Article images
- click to enlarge -
Author : Dianne Panel







Created : 06 Dec 2001
Last Revision : 07 Dec 2001

Medications come in a bottle or packet with a label we can read; vaccinations come in a syringe grasped firmly in the doctor's hand and with no preliminary document which we can peruse in the waiting room beforehand.

According to anti-immunisation groups, the base material for certain vaccines is produced from cells taken from aborted foetuses. This is partly correct but not as bizarre and unpalatable as it may first appear, in that the cells were taken from the lung of one foetus several decades ago and are reproduced.

There are also traces of human blood products and animal enzymes used in these base products. I can understand the reservations of parents who are opposed to blood transfusions, or are vegetarians, having a problem with this, but for others it should not be disconcerting. Most people do, after all, consume foods such as eggs, lambs fry, and steak and kidney pie. These foods enter our bodies, are processed, and finish up in our bloodstreams � the same bloodstreams the vaccines are injected into. Many people receive blood in the course of an operation or following an accident, and many donate blood. Let's remain open and analytical, keeping logic to the fore.

The Institute of Environmental Science and Research informed me that, "all these vaccines must meet strict manufacturing standards."

I pondered this statement trying to decide whether it alluded to the meticulous scrubbing of all workbenches and vials or strict monitoring of the vaccine contents. In fact it could mean anything. After all, these strict standards must first be drawn up by a person or body which sets the benchmark so, without more details, the term is fairly meaningless. The following is a list of the most controversial ingredients, either present in childhood disease vaccines, or used in their manufacture.
< < 1 2 3 4
Comments on this article:  

Need help? call on (09) 4730034 or fax (09) 4730034
EduSearch.co.nz © 2001 | advertise | legal | privacy | site design by The NZonline Group Ltd.