2017
DOI: 10.1177/1073110517750597
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Shaming Vaccine Refusal

Abstract: This piece explores legal, ethical, and policy arguments associated with using interventions that leverage feelings of shame and social exclusion to promote uptake of childhood immunizations by parents.

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Cited by 17 publications
(20 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
(42 reference statements)
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“…Constable, Blank & Caplan (2014) described the economic impact of a healthcareassociated measles outbreak in two hospitals was placed at $799,136 in 2008 and the recent measles outbreak in San Diego because of exposure to an intentionally unvaccinated child was $10,376 per measles case. Therefore, to make the decision to not vaccinate more equitable for society, those who choose to forgo vaccination should be faced with a fine to "offset" the potential cost to the society from which they enjoy herd immunity (Silverman & Wiley, 2017).…”
Section: Cost Of Disease Outbreakmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Constable, Blank & Caplan (2014) described the economic impact of a healthcareassociated measles outbreak in two hospitals was placed at $799,136 in 2008 and the recent measles outbreak in San Diego because of exposure to an intentionally unvaccinated child was $10,376 per measles case. Therefore, to make the decision to not vaccinate more equitable for society, those who choose to forgo vaccination should be faced with a fine to "offset" the potential cost to the society from which they enjoy herd immunity (Silverman & Wiley, 2017).…”
Section: Cost Of Disease Outbreakmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ten of the nineteen articles explored community safety and the concept of vaccines' ability to promote herd immunity. Across all of the articles selected themes of outbreak prevention and vaccination maintenance were recurrent themes (Aita & Ragland, 2015;Barraza et al, 2013;Bucchieri 2016;Buttenhei et al, 2013;El Amin et al 2012;Diekema, 2014;Hendrix et al, 2014;Moser et al, 2015;Silverman & Wiley, 2017;Wang et al, 2014). All ten articles presented that vaccinations have proven to be effective in eradicating numerous disease outbreaks, largely due to maintenance of herd immunity.…”
Section: Community Safetymentioning
confidence: 99%
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