Sample #8
Should
parents be obliged to immunise their children against childhood diseases?
Or do individuals have the right to choose not to immunise their children?
Or do individuals have the right to choose not to immunise their children?
model answer:
Some people argue that the state does not have
the right to make parents immunise their children.
However, I feel the question is not whether
they should immunise but whether, as members of society, they have the right not
to.
Preventative medicine has proved to be the
most effective way of reducing the incidence of fatal childhood diseases.
As a result of the widespread practice of
immunising young children in our society, many lives have been saved and the
diseases have been reduced to almost zero.
In previous centuries children died from
ordinary illnesses such as influenza and tuberculosis and because few people
had immunity, the diseases spread easily.
Diseases such as dysentery were the result of
poor hygiene but these have long been eradicated since the arrival of good
sanitation and clean water.
Nobody would suggest that we should reverse
this good practice now because dysentery has been wiped out.
Serious diseases such as polio and smallpox
have also been eradicated through national immunisation programmes.
In consequence, children not immunised are far
less at risk in this disease-free society than they would otherwise be.
Parents choosing not to immunise are relying
on the fact that the diseases have already been eradicated.
If the number of parents choosing not to
immunise increased, there would be a similar increase in the risk of the
diseases returning.
Immunisation is not an issue like seatbelts
which affects only the individual.
A decision not to immunise will have
widespread repercussions for the whole of society and for this reason, I do not
believe that individuals have the right to stand aside.
In my opinion immunisation should be
obligatory.
Sample #9
Should
parents be obliged to immunise their children against common Band 9 answer
childhood diseases? Or do individuals have the right to choose not to immunise
their children?
model answer:
The issue of whether we should force parents
to immunise their children against common diseases is, in my opinion, a social
rather than a medical question.
Since we are free to choose what we expose our
bodies to in the way of food, drink, or religion for that matter, why should
the question of medical 'treatment' be any different?
Medical researchers and governments are primarily
interested in overall statistics and trends and in money-saving schemes which
fail to take into consideration the individual's concerns and rights.
While immunisation against diseases such as
tetanus and whooping cough may be effective, little information is released
about the harmful effects of vaccinations which can sometimes result in stunted
growth or even death.
The body is designed to resist disease and to
create its own natural immunity through contact with that disease.
So when children are given artificial
immunity, we create a vulnerable society which is entirely dependent on
immunisation.
In the event that mass immunisation programmes
were to cease, the society as a whole would be more at risk than ever before.
In addition there is the issue of the rights
of the individual.
As members of a society, why should we be
obliged to subject our children to this potentially harmful practice?
Some people may also be against immunisation
on religious grounds and their needs must also be considered.
For these reasons I feel strongly that
immunisation programmes should not be obligatory and that the individual should
have the right to choose whether or not to participate.
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