Dozens of students were temporarily suspended at a school in Minnesota on Wednesday after they questioned the safety of vaccines. The Rochester School district removed 71 students from class after they failed to show that they had received their vaccinations, as part of a plan to enforce a controversial state law that requires all school children to be immunized. CBS reports: Students had to submit the proper paperwork to the school district in order to prove they are exempt by Wednesday. The Rochester School district said the decision to prohibit students from attending class that did not have official documentation that they received their vaccines is simply enforcing a state law. Some of the vaccines required by the state of Minnesota Include measles, mumps, chicken pox and tetanus. The deadline falls on the same week two Minnesota Wild Hockey players fell sick with the mumps, one of the vaccinations the state requires. Dr. Gigi Chawla of Children’s Minnesota believes this highlights just how important immunizations are to people’s health. “I think that’s an important highlight for why it is just so relevant to be talking about this… [vaccines] protect kids and they save kid’s lives,” she said. Rochester Public Schools [...]
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