http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/22/opinion/22wed3.html?ref=opinion
Grounds: Influenza is common in children, and 20,000 under 5 years old are hospitalized with it each year.
Claim: New Jersey should pass a bill that requires all preschool age children to obtain an influenza vaccination.
Warrant: Influenza shots are beneficial and necessary.
Backing: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American Academy of Pediatrics advise that children 6 months old through 18 years be vaccinated yearly. This vaccine can prevent the flu from spreading to adults because children are the first to contract the virus.
Rebuttal: Parents have religious or medical reasons against it.
Qualifier: There is a "conscientious exemption" that allows parents to forgo the vaccine.
The author claims that New Jersey should pass a bill that requires all children in preschools or child-care centers to obtain an influenza immunization. This vaccine is necessary because 20,000 children under the age of five are hospitalized with the illness each year. The epidemic of influenza could be prevented if this bill were passed since children generally contract the virus first; if they were vaccinated, the flu would not spread to adults. Also, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American Academy of Pediatrics recommend that children six months through eighteen years of age be immunized. However, some parents oppose this bill because of religious or medical reasons. In these cases, the "conscientious exemption" provision of the bill would allow parents to legally exempt vaccination for their children.
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