Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Proposes Tougher Rules For Exempting School Kids From Vaccinations

The Canadian Press, 11 Dec, 2015 11:19 AM
  • Ontario Proposes Tougher Rules For Exempting School Kids From Vaccinations
TORONTO — Ontario is looking to strengthen the requirements for parents who want to exempt school children from vaccines for non-medical reasons.
 
Health Minister Eric Hoskins says the proposed new strategy, called Immunization 2020, will strengthen the publicly funded immunization program by requiring parents who want a non-medical exemption for their kids to attend an education session.
 
Parents would have to take a course at their local public health unit on the benefits of vaccines and the "very real risks" their children face if they are not immunized before they can get an exemption.
 
Hoskins says it's time to update Ontario's 1982 law — the first of its kind in Canada — that required children be vaccinated against certain diseases in order to be able to attend school, unless they had a valid exemption.
 
There will also be public education campaigns on immunization and an online tool to help remind parents of their children's vaccination schedules, based on birthdays.
 
Hoskins says the new plan "is a call for action and participation for health-care workers, public health specialists and all Ontarians involved with the province's immunization system," and follows recommendations of the auditor general.
 
The auditor concluded last December that the Ministry of Health has no way of tracking the percentage of Ontarians immunized for certain diseases, or whether its immunization program is cost-effective.
 
A report this year from the C.D. Howe Institute and another from an independent panel of medical experts both criticized the lack of data on Ontario's immunization programs.

MORE National ARTICLES

New Brunswick Opposition Turns Over Atcon Computer Servers To The RCMP

New Brunswick Opposition Turns Over Atcon Computer Servers To The RCMP
Opposition spokesman Bob Fowlie says the servers were bought at a bankruptcy auction in 2013, but the party only became aware of the information on one of the servers recently.

New Brunswick Opposition Turns Over Atcon Computer Servers To The RCMP

Ontario Exempts Teachers Who Went On Illegal Strikes From Pension Rules

TORONTO — Ontario's education minister says an agreement allowing teachers who went on illegal strikes earlier this year to make pension contributions for that time won't apply to future illegal job actions.

Ontario Exempts Teachers Who Went On Illegal Strikes From Pension Rules

Hotline In Manitoba To Let People Know How To Help Syrian Refugees

Hotline In Manitoba To Let People Know How To Help Syrian Refugees
It will provide information to anyone looking to make a donation or who wants to volunteer with resettlement efforts.

Hotline In Manitoba To Let People Know How To Help Syrian Refugees

NATO Eager To Size Up Justin Trudeau Government As ISIL Threat Emerges In Libya

NATO Eager To Size Up Justin Trudeau Government As ISIL Threat Emerges In Libya
BRUSSELS — Stephane Dion hasn't even arrived yet in Brussels, but a lineup is already forming to meet Canada's new global affairs minister.

NATO Eager To Size Up Justin Trudeau Government As ISIL Threat Emerges In Libya

Ontario Prepared To Take Roughly 4,000 Refugees This Year: Minister

Ontario Prepared To Take Roughly 4,000 Refugees This Year: Minister
TORONTO — Ontario's health minister says the province is prepared to take roughly 4,000 of the 10,000 Syrian refugees set to arrive in Canada by the end of the year.

Ontario Prepared To Take Roughly 4,000 Refugees This Year: Minister

Opening Five Safe-Injection Sites Makes Financial Sense For Ontario: Study

Opening Five Safe-Injection Sites Makes Financial Sense For Ontario: Study
Ahmed Bayoumi, a medical researcher at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto, says three such facilities in that city and two in Ottawa would make financial sense given the increasing effectiveness of hepatitis C treatment.

Opening Five Safe-Injection Sites Makes Financial Sense For Ontario: Study