Persistent measles outbreak in Italy complicates government plans to unwind compulsory vaccination

A year after Italy’s governing parties took power pledging to repeal mandatory vaccinations, they can’t figure out how to meet that promise, POLITICO reports. 

A persistent measles outbreak is complicating the government’s effort to unwind Italy’s compulsory vaccination law after the country recorded the second highest number of new infections among EU countries in 2018.

While the 5Star Movement and the League are united in their pledge to not force parents to inoculate their kids, they’ve so far been unable to forge a policy that satisfies both public health concerns and their populist base.

The 2017 Lorenzin decree, named after former Health Minister Beatrice Lorenzin, made 10 vaccines mandatory for children between 0 and 16. It mandated children between 0 and 6 be excluded from day care and kindergartens if their parents don’t provide a proof they were vaccinated, and fines for parents of children between 6 and 16 years old.

Via Politico

 

 

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