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Parents: Make sure children are vaccinated

Last year, Minnesota suffered through its largest measles outbreak, with 75 cases reported, many of them in the Somali community in Minneapolis. The Somali population was vulnerable because many parents had received misinformation about the possibility that vaccines can cause autism.

This notion is blatantly false. It has been discredited by study after study. A fraudulent paper published in 1998 in The Lancet has been retracted, the physician who wrote the paper has been discredited and lost his license to practice medicine. Yet still the fraud continues to turn parents fearfully away from one of the most important health measures they can provide their children.

This year, Minnesota had two measles cases reported, both involving unvaccinated children who had visited countries where measles are more prevalent. Europe and Africa are seeing increases in measles because of low vaccination rates.

As Minnesota enters the school year and the flu vaccination season, let’s remember that there is no good reason not to get children vaccinated against the diseases that are out there. Consider the source of any information that warns you of the dangers of vaccinations. It is not coming from anywhere reputable.

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