American parents began making vulnerable children. Cautious adults ignore vaccines that manage preventable diseases throughout the country. Children should not accept susceptibility of immune system not vaccinated. In this era, parents have no reason to avoid vaccination. Because, once fatal health risks, financial defects, and moral doubts causing doubts gradually disappeared. Deadly diseases such as measles, polio and tetanus can be prevented by vaccination, but if parents do not vaccinate their children to cause these diseases, they will paralyze.
Since vaccination, medicine has succeeded in excluding many of the fatal and debilitating childhood diseases so far in countries where childhood immunity is almost universal. - Immunization is one of the most successful medical outcomes of contemporary civilization and is widely recognized as a cost-effective public health instrument. It prevents citizens from suffering from serious diseases such as measles, mumps, rubella and diphtheria. Although these diseases are common to several generations of children, the mortality rate is currently declining due to vaccination. In addition, it is not until the second century ago that smallpox became a fatal illness and millions of people died each year.
Even in countries where vaccination is introduced, the incidence is high. Measles are the main cause of vaccine preventable childhood mortality. Worldwide, immunization campaign led by measles initiative partners has drastically reduced the mortality rates of the American Red Cross, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the United Nations Foundation, UNICEF and the World Health Organization (WHO). In the whole world, measles decreased from an estimated 873,000 in 1999 to 345,000 in 2005, a decrease of 60%. According to estimates in 2008, the worldwide death toll has further declined to 164,000, and 77% of the measles deaths in 2008 occurred in Southeast Asia.
Early in the 20th century, measles was very common and was considered a childhood ceremony. But it is not harmless. Not only fatal but also encephalitis is a complication. According to data from the Atlanta Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, after the vaccine was approved in 1963, approximately 19 million children were vaccinated over the next 10 years. Walter Orenstein, Deputy Director of the Emory University Atlanta Vaccine Center, says: "Because polio is very contagious it soon won." Levels and problems of vaccination for poor children "