One Israeli town revealed as home to hundreds of unvaccinated kids

Hundreds of children in a northern Israeli town have not been ‎vaccinated for measles, Israel Hayom learned over the weekend. ‎

Israel is currently fighting one of the worst measles‎ outbreaks it has ‎known in decades. Some 2,000 Israelis have contracted the disease ‎so ‎far in 2018 and in late October, an 18-month-old toddler died ‎of ‎measles in Jerusalem.‎

The outbreak has underscored a myriad of failures by the Health ‎Ministry, which has been unable to properly deal with the growing ‎trend of parents who refuse to vaccinate their children, thus placing ‎all those around them at risk of catching the highly contagious ‎disease. ‎

Data obtained by Israel Hayom shows that in the northern town of Pardes ‎Hanna alone, 500 out of the community's 600 school-‎age children have not been vaccinated for measles, and the ‎Health Ministry has done nothing about it. ‎

Doctors, nurses, teachers and school administrators continued to ‎protest over the ministry's incompetence in combating the ‎phenomenon of parents who refuse to vaccinate their children. ‎

‎"It's really tragic how for years the Health Ministry did nearly ‎nothing against these parents, did not even encourage vaccination via ‎a public awareness campaign," a Health Ministry official told Israel ‎Hayom.‎
‎"Until the latest outbreak of measles, there were many places in ‎Israel where kids were simply not vaccinated and the Health ‎Ministry did nothing for years."‎

The issue of the Health Ministry's failure in the matter has not ‎escaped the State Comptroller's Office, which as far back as 2014 ‎has warned that the ministry was doing nothing to counter vaccine refusal.

Pardes Hanna school administrators have urged the parents to ‎vaccinate their children. ‎

‎"As school principals, we do not have any formal authority to set ‎policy on this issue, but we urge you to be vigilant about signs of ‎disease," a letter circulated to the parents reads. ‎

‎"There are more than 600 children and more than 100 staff ‎members in Pardes Hanna, and all of us also come in contact with ‎at-risk populations such as pregnant women, children with ‎allergies, infants and the elderly, as well as people who are ill, who constitute ‎an at-risk group in and of itself."‎

A statement by the Health Ministry said, "Israel Hayom has chosen ‎to interpret reality in a way that is detached from reality. Israel's ‎immunization rates are among the highest in the world, thanks to ‎the Health Ministry's long-standing activities. ‎

‎"Pockets of resistance to vaccines exist all over the world, and ‎Israel deals with them exceptionally well. The latest outbreak has been ‎traced back to outbreaks abroad and populations that are not ‎registered with the Interior Ministry, which the Health Ministry has ‎no access to. ‎

"The Health Ministry has taken unprecedented action to increase ‎immunization rates. We are proud of the ministry's teams for their ‎impressive dedication to this cause," the statement said.