Big
U.S. majority favors mandatory vaccinations: Reuters/Ipsos poll
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[February 24, 2015]
By Alistair Bell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A large majority of
Americans favor mandatory vaccinations of children, a Reuters/Ipsos poll
showed on Tuesday, apparently unswayed by some senior Republicans who
have raised fears the medical shots could lead to autism.
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Seventy-eight percent of respondents in the online survey said all
children should be vaccinated unless there is a direct health risk
to them from vaccination.
Only 13 percent opposed vaccinations.
"The numbers are absolutely overwhelming in favor of vaccinations
with a consistent minority in opposition," said Ipsos pollster Julia
Clarke.
Republican Senator Rand Paul, an ophthalmologist and potential 2016
presidential candidate, this month revived a long-running
controversy over vaccinations when he said he had heard of instances
where vaccines caused mental disorders.
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, another possible Republican
presidential hopeful, said parents needed a "measure of choice." But
his spokesman later said the governor believed kids should be
vaccinated against measles.
The disease was declared eliminated from the United States in 2000,
but a measles outbreak that began in California in December has
shone a spotlight on an anti-vaccination movement based mostly in
California and the Pacific Northwest. Theories of a link between vaccines and autism have led some parents
to refuse to have their children inoculated, even after those
theories have been debunked.
The Reuters-Ipsos poll showed the number of people opposed to
vaccinations was significantly higher in the Far West, at 17
percent, than anywhere else in the country.
"It's to do with the no-vaccination movement possibly originating
there like an epicenter," Clarke said.
The data also suggests support for not vaccinating children "does
appear to be correlated with what I'd call libertarian or
anti-authority tendencies and sentiment," Clarke said. That support
tends to be from people who lean more toward the Republican or Tea
Party but are much more likely to identify themselves as
independent, she said.
Older people are clearly more supportive of vaccinations than
younger people, the survey showed.
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Overall, 71 percent of Americans think public schools should be
allowed to suspend unvaccinated children when there is a major
disease outbreak.
Forty-two percent said a politician's position on vaccinations would
have a major impact on whether they voted for him or her.
Thirty-five percent said it would not.
Asked whether parents should be allowed to choose whether to
vaccinate their children, 38 percent backed that idea while 44
percent opposed it.
A sample of 6,012 Americans over 18 years old were interviewed
online for the survey between February 4-23.
The precision of Reuters/Ipsos online polls is measured using a
credibility interval. In this case, the poll has a credibility
interval of plus or minus 1.4 percentage points.
(Editing by John Whitesides and David Gregorio)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
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