Macmillan Cancer Support Christmas Fayre...
Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by nfn. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well Well now Mr.mfewell...aren't we just keen to take a jab at the other guy today?
I was going to answer nfn by sharing my personal experience with traveling from home in the US to England years back...
I do not recall ever having to worry about any immunizations, but US citizens are required to have certain shots at specific age periods in our lifetime anyway.
Also having traveled to Germany as well...I don't remember having any immunizations then either.
Apparently pets need to be vaccinated.
There's nothing we've got that's epidemic, so it should be ok. Obviously, with parents increasingly resisting MMR, and sometimes not getting the single jabs, I know there's an increase in mumps. So perhaps people might make sure their kids are up-to-date on mumps jabs.
Otherwise, we're a pretty healthy bunch really! Your sort of question should remind us all to be grateful that our health service and quality of life enables this! People might say the NHS sucks, but I found the other day a list of jabs as long as my arm (HAHA) that I'd had as a child.. and all for free, and touch wood *knocks on own head, with old family name joke in mind* I've never had any of the diseases. So we're generally a lucky lot I say!
I don't think mfewell was having a go at America, but there are many countries where his/her answer is particularly relevant. Often this is due to a lack of development caused by the present or past colonial power. I am visiting one of those countries in three weeks and have had the injections. I wouldn't expect the inhabitants of that country to need them if they came to England.
mfewell - I am puzzled by 'and an aqueduct' - could you expand on that?