Vaccines can save lots of lives. Lots of people get them, but some people don't. Most people can be scared of anything that comes at them with a needle. But more people die by walking then vaccines, so the risk is very low. When communities that have low vaccination rates, they are plagued with disease. Many of these diseases can kill lots of people, so should people have the freedom of choice when it comes to vaccines? This problem is important because lots of people die of deadly diseases each year, just because someone is misinformed about the safety of vaccines. This is why this question of the freedom of medical choice has to be asked.
Vaccines save lots of lives, but how? What exactly happens in the places with low vaccine rates? What about with high vaccine rates? There is an answer behind this evidence that will prove that vaccines can save lives in a very easy way.
According to Time.com, 4/20/15, there was a measles outbreak in Disneyland, California because people didn't their vaccines. It was linked to only one small community. This one community that had caused a whole measles outbreak had a confirmed vaccination rate of 38%. That is considered a very low vaccination rate. It caused 42 cases in the community alone, but only got worse when it
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First, there was 87 new cases of whooping cough. A newspaper confirmed that it was in Kentucky. It also states disease is vaccine preventable. However, vaccines were not used to prevent this deadly disease. Also, the vaccines were available at stores all over where the outbreak occurred, but people still refused to get vaccinated.The third author concludes that 87 new cases of a deadly disease broke out because a group of people refused to get their vaccine for whooping cough. This shows that just a tiny bit of people not getting their vaccines can cause a lot of