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Almost 70 per cent of Canadians surveyed want child vaccines to be mandatory: poll

A new poll suggests nearly 70 per cent of Canadians support mandatory childhood vaccinations, but at least one public health official says she’s uncomfortable with the idea of forcing parents to immunize their kids.

The Angus Reid Institute survey landed Thursday as Public Health Ontario said 93 new measles cases have emerged in the province over the past week, bringing the total number of infections there to 1,888 since October.

The poll found 69 per cent of respondents said proof of immunization should be required for kids to attend daycare and school. That’s an increase from the 55 per cent of respondents who said the same thing last year, before a measles outbreak emerged in multiple provinces and infected mostly unvaccinated infants, kids and teens.

Dr. Sarah Wilson said she’s a strong advocate for immunization but also feels it’s better to let families come to these decisions on their own terms.

“I think it’s really challenging to establish trust in vaccination and trust in public health if we’re forcing interventions, including vaccination on individuals,” said Wilson, a medical epidemiologist at Public Health Ontario.

Proof of vaccination is mandatory for kids to attend school in Ontario and New Brunswick, unless they have a valid exemption, but that’s not the case in other provinces, says the Angus Reid report.

The percentage of poll respondents who favoured proof of vaccination was slightly lower than the national rate in Alberta, at 60 per cent, but higher than the 48 per cent of Albertans who supported a mandate last year.

In Alberta, 26 new cases of measles were confirmed on Thursday alone, bringing the provincial total to 654 cases since the beginning of March.