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By

Ellie Cannon

Opinion

All girls need this vaccine

September 12, 2011 10:20
3 min read

O ver the past three years, an entire cohort of schoolgirls in the UK has been on the front line of medical innovation. Following in the footsteps of their American and Australian peers, girls aged 12 and 13 years old, are being vaccinated against cervical cancer.

To me as a doctor, this is a glorious scientific advance. To me as a parent, this is a gift I would accept for my daughter with open arms.

One of the greatest advances in health-care in the past 100 years has been mass vaccination programmes. To be able to protect our children against life-threatening illnesses in a world where babies a few time zones away still die from diarrhoea is nothing short of a medical miracle. As if that wasn't enough, now we have the opportunity to vaccinate against cancer. That's right. The big C. A disease that is still the subject of huge fear and taboo, so much so, even doctors use euphemisms for it.

We have the chance to vaccinate our daughters against it. Not all cancers obviously, but the second most common cancer in women. So why are girls in the Jewish community being denied this life-saving opportunity?