In a tribunal on Friday, a mother told a hearing how the “misleading” name of a controversial anti-vaccination lobby group convinced her not to immunise her daughter.
That’s right. We’re talking about the Australian Vaccination Network.
Again.
Because the AVN – who peddle misleading and dangerous, anti-vaccination rhetoric to new parents – are still putting families at risk.
According to News.com.au, the mother told the hearing that she was, quote, “scammed by these (AVN) losers”. She said that after reading the AVN website, she had been scared into not vaccinating her baby daughter.
The mother continued, “It was only due to the insistence of my mother that I looked further into the issue and found that not only did [immunisation] not cause autism, I had been lied to by this organisation … I put my much-loved and much-wanted daughter’s life at risk because I believed this organisation was giving me legitimate medical information.”
AVN president Greg Beattie responded that he didn’t think AVN’s name was misleading “at all”.
In the wake of the hearing, the Australian Vaccination Network has been ordered to run a temporary disclaimer on its website and Facebook page. A consumer warning, alerting parents and other readers to the fact that the information on the website is not sanctioned by the Government, or any official health departments.