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    8 commenti

    1. No_Priors on

      I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: I don’t believe in children, they were invented in the 1960s by “Big Toy” to get us to buy their products.

      Don’t fall for it sheeple of ages 15 and up, batteries not included.

    2. SameLotus on

      crazy that this is something that needs to be promoted in 2025

      has anyone made a documentary to pinpoint where vaccine deniers started gaining popularity or is it just algorithms creating echochambers and it escalated from there?

    3. OffOption on

      Being against vaccination, is like being against having sewer systems. Or being against insulation as a concept.

      Its genuinly anti civilizastion. Its a viewpoint we must utterly disreguard. Of course those with actual allergies and other genuine exceptions should not be dismissed, but the fuckers who wants to murder your grandma, through their right to commit murder by proxy, isnt worth respecting.

      I fucking hate needles. I went pale as wallpaper when I was a kid for em. And I say, give it all. To everyone. Without question.

    4. Argononium on

      For some additional context – it’s not only about antivaxxers but also about Ukrainian children who fled the war, and whose vaccination rates are much lower than satisfactory

    5. dat_9600gt_user on

      **Poland’s public health authorities have launched a campaign to promote compliance with mandatory vaccinations for children.**

      The country’s vaccination programme, known as the Children’s Vaccination Calendar, was introduced in the 1960s and has expanded over time.

      It now requires parents to vaccinate their children against 12 infectious diseases: tuberculosis, hepatitis B, rotavirus, diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, polio, Hib, pneumococcus, measles, mumps and rubella.

      All children residing in Poland for more than three months must be vaccinated. Parents who fail to comply may face fines, though enforcement is often a lengthy process and not consistently applied.

      According to recent data, over 80,000 children in Poland have not received the mandatory vaccinations, a number that continues to grow.

      Many of these diseases were largely eliminated due to widespread immunisation, but declining vaccination rates have led to their resurgence. Recent cases of diphtheria, polio and whooping cough highlight the risks.

      Poland’s Chief Sanitary Inspector, Dr. Paweł Grzesiowski, has warned that parents who refuse vaccines and fail to follow the immunisation schedule for their children pose a threat to public health.

      (ab/gs)

      *Click on the audio player above for a report by* ***Agnieszka Bielawska****.*

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