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Check the source: WHO-validated websites provide trustworthy information on vaccine safety

When people need advice about topics like health, careers, or relationships, the first place they often look is the internet. The same is true when parents and caregivers are seeking credible information about whether vaccines are safe for their children.

However, finding that information often isn’t easy. In recent years a number of websites providing unbalanced, misleading, and alarming vaccine safety information have been established, prompting a wave of undue fears.

“Every day, misinformation about vaccines continues to proliferate on the internet,” says Isabelle Sahinovic, Vaccine Safety Net coordinator at WHO. “This is dangerous. We need to make sure that all parents, caregivers, and health care professionals can easily access accurate and trustworthy information about vaccines.”

WHO’s Vaccine Safety Net, a global network of vaccine safety websites, aims to do just this. Today, the network has 47 member websites in 12 languages. It is estimated that more than 173 million users every month access VSN websites that contain, among other information, credible vaccine safety information.

Adhering to good information practices

WHO evaluates candidate websites using criteria defined by the Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety – an independent, authoritative and scientific committee that advises the Organization on vaccine safety issues of global or regional concern that could impact national immunization programmes.

An initial check ensures that sites have a public health focus, contain current evidence-based and unbiased information on vaccine safety, are clearly written, and easily navigated.

Websites also are ineligible to join the network if they represent industry. VSN sites must be reviewed and updated at least every 2 years.

Once through the initial screening process, the VSN evaluation team then examines the website using a set of 34 formal assessment criteria.

To become part of the Vaccine Safety Network, websites must be transparent in saying who owns, manages, and pays for the content they host, and also have processes in place to validate the sources of the information they publish.

READ MORE AT: http://www.who.int/features/2017/vaccine-safety-website/en/

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You’ve got questions. That’s a good thing.

As parents, determining how best to protect our children can be overwhelming and confusing. We’re here to help.

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