measles - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Mon, 02 Dec 2019 16:59:34 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg measles - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Measles epidemic in Samoa - Caritas provides helping hands https://cathnews.co.nz/2019/12/02/caritas-measles-epidemic-samoa/ Mon, 02 Dec 2019 07:00:13 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=123534 measles

In Samoa, fifty-three people are now dead, after having contracted measles. More than 3000 people have now been infected with the disease and doctors say the death toll is likely to rise. George Fa'alogo, Caritas Aotearoa New Zealand's (CANZ) humanitarian coordinator, is in close contact with Caritas Samoa. He says, "We're at a loss to Read more

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In Samoa, fifty-three people are now dead, after having contracted measles.

More than 3000 people have now been infected with the disease and doctors say the death toll is likely to rise.

George Fa'alogo, Caritas Aotearoa New Zealand's (CANZ) humanitarian coordinator, is in close contact with Caritas Samoa.

He says, "We're at a loss to describe the impact of this outbreak, especially for those families who have lost more than one child.'

He said CANZ would continue to support Caritas Samoa so they may continue their outreach work in these communities.

Caritas Samoa has been collecting supplies such as food, clothing, hand sanitiser, bed sheets, pillows, towels and medical face masks for hospitals, clinics and families.

They are also mobilising volunteers to put together family packages of these supplies that patients and their families can pick up from donation stations outside of hospitals and clinics.

Samoa declared a state of emergency on November 15 and a mass vaccination campaign was activated soon after.

The government has announced its intention to make immunisation compulsory.

Schools have been closed, and children under the age of 17 have been banned from public gatherings.

On Saturday the streets of Apia were virtually empty.

Many in the community are tracing the current epidemic back to the deaths of two babies on July 6 last year.

At Tuasivi hospital, two nurses had mixed the wrong liquid with MMR vaccines.

The deaths provoked widespread fear and confusion among parents - and a great deal of mistrust of vaccinations.

Temporary clinics have been set up across the country to provide vaccinations and to treat people who are showing symptoms of measles.

Almost 45,000 people have now received the measles vaccine.

Caritas Aotearoa New Zealand, together with Caritas Australia and Catholic Relief Services, are sending a solidarity grant to Caritas Samoa to assist them in their work.

The funding will help in the collection and distribution of essential supplies.

It will also provide transportation for medical professionals and mobile clinics to vaccinate people in rural areas.

You can support Caritas' relief efforts for emergencies such as this by donating to their Pacific Relief Fund on our website:

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Lance O'Sullivan tells anti-vaxxers "Go live on an Island" https://cathnews.co.nz/2019/09/09/lance-osullivan-anti-vaxxers/ Mon, 09 Sep 2019 08:02:03 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=121011 anti-vaxxers

Well-known Northland doctor Lance O'Sullivan has renewed a call for benefit cuts and higher taxes for parents who don't vaccinate their children. New Zealand is in the midst of a huge surge in measles cases, with almost 900 in Auckland, and more than 1100 confirmed cases notified across the country. Just 53 of the people Read more

Lance O'Sullivan tells anti-vaxxers "Go live on an Island"... Read more]]>
Well-known Northland doctor Lance O'Sullivan has renewed a call for benefit cuts and higher taxes for parents who don't vaccinate their children.

New Zealand is in the midst of a huge surge in measles cases, with almost 900 in Auckland, and more than 1100 confirmed cases notified across the country.

Just 53 of the people who caught measles this year had been vaccinated.

O'Sullivan blames Andrew Wakefield - a struck-off doctor responsible for the fraudulent study that claimed the MMR vaccine caused autism - for the 300 per cent increase in cases of measles across the globe in the past 12 months.

"Now what I say to anti-vaxxers is, 'Go live on an island'" says O'Sullivan.

Last week he reiterated his call for New Zealand to adopt Australia's "no jab, no pay" strategy and introduce a higher tax rate for those who do not vaccinate their children.

But the Government says there's no evidence to show sanctions or compulsion around vaccinations is effective.

In a statement to Stuff, the Associate Health Minister Julie Anne Genter said there was a broad political agreement that children should not be punished for parents' choices.

O'Sullivan has been a long-time advocate for vaccination.

In 2017 he stormed a screening of the anti-vaccination movie Vaxxed, telling the audience they were responsible for children dying.

He has called for all parents to be forced to vaccinate as far back as 2015 when Australia first brought in the no jab, no pay policy.

The Ministry of Health's director-general Ashley Bloomfield last week said much of New Zealand's shortfall in vaccination rates were related to vaccine hesitancy and access issues rather than being directly due to anti-vaxxer sentiment.

However, the University of Auckland's vaccinologist Helen Petousis-Harris said vaccine hesitancy was a direct result of anti-vaxxers activities.

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Lance O'Sullivan tells anti-vaxxers "Go live on an Island"]]>
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Welby's conversion was embarrassing, ‘like getting measles' https://cathnews.co.nz/2013/07/23/welbys-conversion-was-embarrassing-like-getting-measles/ Mon, 22 Jul 2013 19:01:33 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=47424 Describing his personal conversion experience, the Archbishop of Canterbury says he felt "a clear sense of something changing" but "I was desperately embarrassed that this had happened to me, like getting measles". Since then, says Archbishop Justin Welby, there have been long periods with "no sense of any presence at all'', but he has never Read more

Welby's conversion was embarrassing, ‘like getting measles'... Read more]]>
Describing his personal conversion experience, the Archbishop of Canterbury says he felt "a clear sense of something changing" but "I was desperately embarrassed that this had happened to me, like getting measles".

Since then, says Archbishop Justin Welby, there have been long periods with "no sense of any presence at all'', but he has never gone back on that night's "decision to follow Christ''.

He says it is not his doing: "It's grace. Grace is a reality: feelings are ephemeral."

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