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LA GIUSTIZIA POETICA


“That’s poetic justice,” I thought when I learned that Massimiliano Fedriga (above), a member of the right-wing, anti-vax Lega Nord party, had been hospitalized with a ripping case of chicken pox.  He’s home now and doing fine, or so he’s said on social media.  A pox on his house, say I.

For years, there has been widespread confusion over vaccines in Italy.   Measles is a case in point.  The measles vaccine was introduced in Italy in 1976, and any child who wished to enroll in nursery or elementary school was required to present a doctor’s certification that he or she had been vaccinated against measles.   The obligation proved very effective and by 1999, the disease had all but disappeared.

But in 1998, the Lancet published its since-debunked and ultimately retracted report linking the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine to autism.  This caused a surge in distrust of vaccines, and many Italian parents stopped vaccinating their children.  An unfortunate confluence of events then ensued.  Because measles had become rare, and because school officials assumed parents were still getting their children vaccinated, they became lax in asking for proof.   Things remained stable for a while and despite the relaxation, by 2003, about 90% of school age children had been given the MMR vaccine.  Good news, but it didn’t last, and the reason has everything to do with politics.
Anti-Vax Demonstrators in Rome
Italy has had 65 governments since the end of WWII.  Some of them have been worse than others, but three Prime Ministers and their parties starting in the early 1970s and continuing until the present day stand out for corruption and/or extremism:  Giulio Andreotti, of the Christian Democrat Party, was accused of consorting with la Cosa Nostra and conspiring to murder a journalist.  Silvio Berlusconi, of Forza Italia and later the People of Freedom Party (aka the Bunga Bunga Party), was also alleged to have Mafia ties and was mired in a scandal involving an underage prostitute.  The current Prime Minister, Giuseppe Conte, of the Independent Party, is anything but.  He functions as a mouthpiece for the populist coalition government of the Lega Nord and the anti-establishment party, Cinque Stelle.  In short, over the past 45 years, almost as long as the measles vaccine has been around, corruption and extremism in Italian politics has systematically eroded citizens’ trust in government.

So between the Lancet fraud and bad government, it is no mystery that by 2015 the percentage of children vaccinated against measles dropped from 90% to 85%--which is below the “herd immunity” percentage recommended by the World Health Organization.  Nor is it surprising that in 2017 the number of measles cases in Italy jumped to 5,006 from 843 in 2016, the third highest per capita rate in the EU.  This is no joke.  Measles can cause blindness, brain inflammation, pneumonia, and in some cases, death.
Beatrice Lorenzin, Former Health Minister

The center-left government that came to power in 2017 recognized the crisis and acted swiftly.  Vaccination against 10 childhood diseases was made compulsory for school admissions and the requirement was enforced.  The law was named after the Health Minister at the time, Beatrice Lorenzin.  However, that center-left government was replaced last year by the current right-wing coalition, which just as swiftly put proof of vaccination temporarily on the “honor system.”  From September 2018, children were allowed to attend school as long as their parents attested that they had been vaccinated or would be by March 2019.  No doctor’s certification was required.  When this 6-month temporary honor system expired on March 12th this year, hundreds of children who lacked a doctor’s certification were turned away from their classrooms and nursery schools.  Chaos, Italian style. 
Beppe Grillo, Cinque Stelle, center
Italy’s “No-Vax” movement has moved in lock step with the populist government, and its adherents are both outspoken and “out there” on the subject.  Per The New York Times 20.09.2018:
  • A spokesman for a Veneto No-Vax group asked rhetorically, “No one ever said that a vaccine causes autism, but if a thousand people see a U.F.O., do we want to tell these people that they are crazy or do we want to find a solution?”

  • An artisan who voted for Cinque Stelle said he resented the “arrogance” of scientists who presumed to understand something as complicated as the human immune system.

  • Party members in Puglia invited people to a hearing with doctors who believe eating nuts is more effective than vaccines.

  • Beppe Grillo, the co-founder of Cinque Stelle, insists that vaccines are linked to autism, and claims that the pharmaceutical industry has pushed them for profit.  

  •  Matteo Salvini, the leader of Lega Nord, tweeted that it was “mad” to impose so many vaccines and insisted the choice be left to parents, adding that he was suspicious of multinational corporations promoting vaccines.

  • And repeating the populist creed, a regional Cinque Stelle council member from Lazio said, “Politics come before science.”

Matteo Salvini
Beatrice Lorezin, the former Health Minister responsible for the compulsory vaccination legislation in 2017, would agree.  “It’s all part of the anti-establishment drift.  But science is the last bastion, and when you have minimized the authority of science, there is nothing else.”

All things considered, I might get a chicken pox vaccination before we head to Italy this spring.   I’ll take science over nuts any day.

Keep it real!
Marilyn









Comments

  1. This is infuriating. Also happening on a large scale in the Pacific Northwest, where apparently all those too nutty for CA have floated to the top, soon to wash into Canada. These idiots not vaccinating their kids are too young to remember polio scares or seeing kids in iron lungs, like my colleague Barbara had to endure. My friend Elliott had had polio as a child that had affected his legs and led to his early death. Or maybe they would like to meet Barb's husband Paul, who was deaf because his mother had been exposed to measles while she was pregnant. I knew a woman, born in 1900, who was deaf in one ear because of diphtheria. Not ancient history, but long enough to obliterate the memory of kids permanently affected by "side effects," when families had to be quarantined so they didn't spread disease to everyone around them.

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