Inhale. Inhale. Exhale, exhale, exhale.
Oct. 25th, 2011 05:21 pmHelp... my views are under attack! It seems that something I arbitrarily claimed on someone else's LJ is very wrong.
My claim was: everyone (in the UK, for approximately accurate values of everyone) had the BCG jab (ie TB vaccine) at secondary school. It seems that this isn't true, though.
What we need is a poll.
[Poll #1789614]
In not-entirely-unrelated news,
hjalfi and I concluded last week that the goverment's current welfare and NHS reforms are not an attempt to undermine the system, but a genuine desire to improve the quality of today's literature. The more starving, tubercular people we have in poor housing, the more poetry we get. Fact.
My claim was: everyone (in the UK, for approximately accurate values of everyone) had the BCG jab (ie TB vaccine) at secondary school. It seems that this isn't true, though.
What we need is a poll.
[Poll #1789614]
In not-entirely-unrelated news,
no subject
Date: 2011-10-25 05:07 pm (UTC)Following the introduction of a selective BCG immunisation policy in Oxfordshire there was no evidence to suggest that this had led to a rise in the levels of notified TB (Tayler & Mayon White 1995, Cohen & Mayon White, 1997 unpublished data), although there was evidence to suggest that the selective immunisation policy was not being rigorously implemented. In 2001 Oxfordshire·s rates remained low, but the re-introduction of routine BCG immunisation into secondary schools was being discussed (Mayon White, personal communication, 2001).
I am not sure if Oxfordshire was the authority that did not introduce selective neonatal vaccination at that time, but it's currently a selective programme and