Close X
Thursday, October 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Bishop Says Abstinence Is The Only Healthy Choice Over Hpv Vaccine

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Sep, 2015 12:04 PM
    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — A Catholic bishop in British Columbia says a vaccine that protects girls against a sexually transmitted infection isn't inherently wrong, but abstinence is the only healthy choice.
     
    Bishop Stephen Jensen of the Diocese of Prince George also said in a September letter to parents of Grade 6 and Grade 9 girls attending Catholic schools that a legal option known as mature-minor consent won't be an option for students in the human papillomavirus vaccination program. 
     
    Mature-minor consent is defined on the BC Centre for Disease Control's website as the authority given to children under the age of 19 to allow, refuse or revoke their consent to be immunized. The centre said that authority takes precedence over parental authority.
     
    "You need to discern the merits of having your child vaccinated or not," Jensen told parents in the letter posted online.
     
    "While the vaccination program is not inherently wrong, parents need to make an informed decision and communicate it in a way that can serve to strengthen their child in the virtue of chastity and reinforce her appreciation of abstinence as the only truly healthy choice."
     
    He said the church and the parish will support parental rights.
     
    The diocese did not respond to email and phone requests for an interview by publication.
     
    In a posting on its website, the diocese provides a type of mission statement that explains the principles upon which its eight Catholic elementary schools operate.
     
    "Children hear, learn, share and experience Catholic faith and values with and from teachers and staff committed to modeling the words and vision of Christ," it said.
     
    HPV is one of the most common sexually transmitted infections, three quarters of sexually active women will get it during their lives and it can become cancerous over time, according to the provincial government website ImmunizeBC.
     
    Northern Health spokesman Jonathon Dyck said in an email that the authority will work with local schools to ensure people make informed choices about vaccinations.
     
    "We want to ensure that the vaccine is offered before people become sexually active as it is a preventative measure, and studies have shown that it does not affect a person's decision about being abstinent," he said.
     
    "It is also an important protection as the person may marry someone who has contracted and carries HPV."
     
    Dyck said the infection is highly contagious and can be spread even without sexual intercourse through skin-to-skin contact.
     
    "The HPV vaccine is safe and up to 99 per cent effective at preventing HPV strains responsible for most HPV related cancers, and genital warts," said Dyck.
     
    Jensen said vaccination teams will visit Catholic schools three times in the coming year and will offer the vaccine on two of those visits. 
     
    The diocese makes no mention in the letter of boys receiving the vaccine.
     
    B.C. Health Minister Terry Lake announced in July that boys and men up to the age of 26 would be eligible for free HPV vaccines in September.
     
    The vaccines are also available at local health units.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada Gains 58,900 Jobs In May, Cautiously Fuelling Hope Of Economic Turnaround

    Canada Gains 58,900 Jobs In May, Cautiously Fuelling Hope Of Economic Turnaround
    OTTAWA — The hobbled economy received an encouraging jolt last month from a surging labour market, one that bolstered workplaces considered key to the country's rebound: factories.

    Canada Gains 58,900 Jobs In May, Cautiously Fuelling Hope Of Economic Turnaround

    Protesters Try To Build Support Around Controversial Pianist's Calgary Concerts

    Protesters Try To Build Support Around Controversial Pianist's Calgary Concerts
    I showed her YouTube videos to my son because he started playing piano at age six and I wanted to encourage him to play better," says Platonova, who came to Canada from Ukraine in 2003 and now lives in Calgary

    Protesters Try To Build Support Around Controversial Pianist's Calgary Concerts

    WestJet Plane Skids Off Runway At Montreal Airport; Nobody Injured

    WestJet Plane Skids Off Runway At Montreal Airport; Nobody Injured
    The Boeing 737 was flying in from Toronto, said Marie-Claude Deschenes, a spokeswoman for the agency that oversees Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport.

    WestJet Plane Skids Off Runway At Montreal Airport; Nobody Injured

    Hamilton Cop Arrested In Police Raid Targeting Toronto Gang

    Hamilton Cop Arrested In Police Raid Targeting Toronto Gang
    TORONTO — A Hamilton police officer is among dozens of people arrested during a police operation targeting gangs and guns in Toronto.

    Hamilton Cop Arrested In Police Raid Targeting Toronto Gang

    Saskatchewan Is Housing Foster Children In Hotels Due To Spike In Numbers

    Saskatchewan Is Housing Foster Children In Hotels Due To Spike In Numbers
    REGINA — The Saskatchewan government has been housing children in the care of social services in Regina hotels in recent weeks.

    Saskatchewan Is Housing Foster Children In Hotels Due To Spike In Numbers

    Halifax Man Christopher Phillips Who Had Cache Of Chemicals Told Officers No Harm Intended To Police

    Halifax Man Christopher Phillips Who Had Cache Of Chemicals Told Officers No Harm Intended To Police
    HALIFAX — A Halifax man who owned a highly poisonous chemical repeatedly told RCMP interviewers he never intended to throw it at officers, despite writing an email discussing a method of doing so.

    Halifax Man Christopher Phillips Who Had Cache Of Chemicals Told Officers No Harm Intended To Police