Credit to Author: eestopace| Date: Tue, 12 Mar 2019 11:51:03 +0000
COTABATO CITY — To address the concerns of Muslim parents over vaccination, especially issues involving their faith, the Ministry of Health on Tuesday issued an Islamic ruling or “fatwa” on immunization across the autonomous region.
The fatwa aims to help promote vaccination to Muslims as a safe and efficient way to prevent common diseases, according to Dr. Safrullah Dipatuan, health minister of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM).
The fatwa was approved by 13 Muslim religious leaders of the Regional Darul Ifta. A ceremonial signing was held before its official launch on the same day.
“Immunization prevents deaths and suffering from vaccine-preventable diseases such as measles, tetanus, polio, pneumonia, hepatitis, diphtheria, rubella, and mumps,” Dipatuan said, adding that saving lives is a holy act that “we must do as an act of faith.”
It seeks to promote vaccination as a safe and efficient way to prevent some common diseases in the Bangsamoro region.
He noted that the most effective way to prevent diseases and death is the vaccination of children.
Data from BARMM’s Ministry of Health showed that as of March 10 about 45,598 infants and children had received anti-measles vaccine shots across the region.
It said measles cases in the region decreased to 361 confirmed cases this year, compared to 1,260 cases during the same period last year.
With the support from the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef), Dr. Zul Qarneyn Abas, MOH deputy minister, said the MOH has asked the Regional Darul Ifta to come out with the fatwa after discovering that many parents in the region ”tend to refuse immunization because they were unsure if vaccination was consistent with their faith.”
In September last year, the MOH and the UNICEF conducted two conferences — one for the island provinces and another for the mainland provinces – and issued a fatwa on the legitimacy of vaccination and the evidence found in the Holy Qur’an and the Sunnah.
Dr. Abas assured that immunization is permissible from the Islamic perspective and that “the vaccines are halal.”
“The best gift we can give to our child is full immunization certificate,” Farid Dastgeer, child protection specialist of UNICEF, said during the launching.
With the fatwa on immunization, the MOH-BARMM hopes to increase the immunization rate across the Bangsamoro region.
“Vaccination should be approved by the World Health Organization, the Food and Drug Administration of the Philippines, Department of Health, and Ministry of Health to ensure that the vaccines are proven to be safe,” Sheik Abdulmuhmin Mujahid said.
He added that the Imam (Islamic leader) can include the fatwa on immunization during the Khutbah (Muslim sermon). /ee
Craig Kimbrel and Dallas Keuchel remain unsigned. They are fine ballplayers. Either one could help any of the 30 teams, though the price those teams are willing to pay for their services has obviously remained a barrier, and the two pitchers remain drifting about in free-agent land.
One hurdle to their employment that has perhaps been under-reported is that both players turned down a $17.9 million qualifying offer from their previous team. That means the signing team must pay a draft-pick penalty, which varies depending on that team’s financial status. It’s worth noting that all first-round picks are now protected unless a team has multiple first-round picks. In that case, the team loses its later pick. This is an obstacle and part of the reason Kimbrel and Keuchel remain unsigned, but it isn’t an insurmountable one.
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(As an aside: If there’s one thing the MLBPA needs to fight for in the next collective bargaining agreement, it’s getting rid of all free-agent compensation and draft penalties. Once you reach free agency, you should be a free agent. You’ve earned the right to not have any restrictions placed on your services.)
Anyway, it’s possible that Kimbrel in particular could wait until after the draft in June to sign. At that point, his free-agent status would no longer be tied to any draft penalties. Since teams are likely interested in him on a shorter-term deal to begin with — even potential Hall of Fame closers are still closers, with all their inherent risks — he could sign a one-year, prorated deal and then head back into free agency. As a second-time free agent, he would no longer be tied to the draft-pick penalties. If he waits, there’s also the chance that some contending team’s closer gets injured or somebody’s bullpen falters, and suddenly interest increases.
I don’t think that will happen. I still believe he and Keuchel will sign soon. Here’s a look at some of the likely landing spots for each player:
The Nationals are currently about $4.5 million below the luxury-tax threshold, and going over for a third straight season would mean paying a 50 percent tax on every dollar above the threshold. Still, there is an obvious need for bullpen depth here behind Doolittle, as the team is counting on Rosenthal coming back after missing all of 2018 and Barraclough, who has averaged 5.5 walks per nine innings in his career, to throw enough strikes to avoid his declining trends the past three years with the Marlins.
Jansen was one of the best closers in the game until last season, when he served up 13 home runs in 71⅔ innings, though he blew just four save chances. He has struggled the past two World Series, with three blown saves, a loss and four home runs in nine appearances. Of course, Kimbrel also was shaky last October through the postseason, though he managed to avoid any blown saves. The Dodgers have more depth than the Nationals, with the likes of Caleb Ferguson, Dylan Floro and Scott Alexander, and signing Kimbrel would create a closer controversy that might be a big headache for Dave Roberts.
The Braves ranked 17th in the majors in bullpen ERA in 2018, and FanGraphs projects only a small improvement (3.85 ERA), which would again leave them in the middle of the pack. Kimbrel and his family were recently spotted having dinner in Celebration, Florida, near where the Braves hold spring training, but maybe he just took the family to Disney World. The Braves have made just one significant move this offseason — signing Josh Donaldson — and adding Kimbrel would bring him back to where he started his career.
Gabe Kapler ran a hyperactive bullpen last year — only the Angels and Cubs had more relief appearances — and they’ve added Robertson, Juan Nicasio and James Pazos to a group that ranked 18th in the majors with a 4.19 ERA. With Robertson and Dominguez, I don’t think there’s an urgent need for late-game relief here, but adding Kimbrel would allow Kapler to push Robertson and Dominguez back into the seventh and eighth innings and shorten games for a rotation that has some questions behind Aaron Nola.
The Twins haven’t been linked to Kimbrel the way the first four teams listed here have, but they might be the team that would benefit the most from signing him, especially since they have a chance to chase down the Indians in the AL Central if things break right. Fernando Rodney was the closer last year until he was traded, so May will have to win the job in spring training, but he’s the favorite after a strong showing down the stretch last year. Reed and Trevor Hildenberger had long ball issues last year, as did free-agent signing Blake Parker while with the Angels. This group could be good or bad. Signing Kimbrel would add a little more certainty.
The Angels signed Cody Allen, coming off a rough season in Cleveland, and are counting on the hard-throwing Anderson and rookie Ty Buttrey, but they clearly lack a settled late-game group. Signing Kimbrel would help, but the Astros are such heavy favorites in the division that L.A.’s best bet for a postseason slot remains the wild card. Apparently that hasn’t been enough to entice the Angels to spend big this winter.
Oh, yes … the Red Sox. Dave Dombrowski and ownership have been consistent all spring, saying that there is basically no chance Kimbrel returns to the Red Sox. The team’s bullpen depth has been hurt in recent days, however, as Steven Wright was suspended 80 games for a PED violation. Brasier has been slowed by an infection in his toe, and Thornburg has struggled early in spring training, allowing 10 hits, seven runs and two home runs in four innings. The Red Sox might be a little more desperate for relief help than they were at the start of camp. Can they win the division without Kimbrel? Sure. Can they lose the division with Kimbrel? Sure. But bringing him back makes them better.
This is still the team most often linked to Keuchel — even after all its offseason maneuvering. It’s easy to see why Keuchel makes sense: Pivetta, Eflin and Velasquez combined to go 27-34 with a 4.68 ERA. They also fanned 478 in 438⅔ innings, so the Phillies can envision better results from them. I do like Pivetta in particular as a breakout candidate, but Keuchel would be the No. 2 guy in this rotation and would allow Philly to bump Velasquez into a swingman/long relief role.
Lucchesi and Lauer were rookies in 2018, Erlin started a career-high 12 games, and Strahm has eight career starts. In other words, this is a very inexperienced rotation. Chris Paddack, who hasn’t pitched above Double-A, has looked so good that he’s reportedly part of the battle for the Opening Day assignment (but most likely, he starts the year in the minors). Those four are all lefties, so bringing in Keuchel as a veteran mentor makes some sense, but after spending big on Manny Machado, Keuchel is probably an unlikely fit.
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Foltynewicz, coming off a season with a 2.85 ERA and 202 strikeouts in 183 innings, was to be the team’s Opening Day starter, but the Braves announced Monday that he’ll miss that assignment due to the sore elbow that has kept him off a mound since Feb. 24. Remember, the Braves are already down Anibal Sanchez, who signed with the Nationals after posting a 2.83 ERA in 24 starts. Yes, they have plenty of young arms waiting in the wings, including Kyle Wright, Max Fried and Mike Soroka, but Keuchel gives them certainty if they have to hedge against Foltynewicz’s health.
The comment here is similar to the Kimbrel one for Minnesota: The Twins might have the most to gain, considering the gap between their fifth starter and Keuchel and the improved odds of making the playoffs that Keuchel would bring. That rotation ranking feels pretty generous, as there is obvious volatility in what to expect from Pineda (coming off Tommy John surgery) and Perez — and even Gibson and Odorizzi (his ERA has risen three seasons in a row). They do have youngsters Fernando Romero and Stephen Gonsalves, but Romero might end up in the bullpen, and Gonsalves is more of a 4-A arm unless he learns to throw more strikes.
Vargas was terrible in 2018, and the others have had various issues with staying healthy. There is basically no depth behind those five. The Mets are well under the luxury tax, and their long-term commitments beyond Robinson Cano are minimal. Just because they’re paying Vargas $8 million this year (plus a $2 million buyout) is no reason not to sign Keuchel.
This is an all-reclamation rotation, as the Rangers hope to get something out of Smyly, Miller and Volquez. Good luck. The Rangers aren’t going to contend for the playoffs this season, but they move into a new park for 2020 and presumably will be looking to be more competitive then. They have money to spend, and it’s not like this is an organization that has been churning out starting pitchers the past several years.
The Mariners aren’t billing themselves as contenders, but neither are they in a complete rebuild. They have Justus Sheffield waiting to take over a slot and Justin Dunn after him, but King Felix has looked horrible in spring training, and LeBlanc will likely regress from his 3.72 ERA/4.28 FIP from a season ago. Keuchel would project as the team’s best starter, and Hernandez’s big salary comes off the books after this season.
The Yankees keep insisting that they’re simply being cautious with Severino’s shoulder, so at this point it doesn’t appear to be a long-term concern. Even if Severino misses a couple of starts, there is capable back-of-the-rotation depth with the likes of Luis Cessa (who has looked good so far in camp), Domingo German and Jonathan Loaisiga. You also wonder if the Yankees have their sights set on a bigger Astros free-agent pitcher next offseason: Gerrit Cole or Justin Verlander.