CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MAY 5, 2015, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MAY 5, 2015, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BROAD NEW VACCINATION LAW IS A MUST”
Rarely has a new law been so urgently
and obviously needed as the broad children’s vaccination requirement now being
carried by the state Legislature’s only medical doctor, Democratic state Sen.
Richard Pan of Sacramento.
While the measure has encountered
resistance in the Legislature and even death threats to Pan, there is no
factual basis for that vehement opposition, while increasing numbers of young
parents are creating demand for it.
One is Madeleine Kauffman (a
fictitious name for a real person), mother of four and herself a doctor. She
spoke the other day in San Francisco about why this tough law is needed.
“Normally, I would take all my kids back East to visit my parents over Spring
Break,” she said during a dinner party. “But my youngest is just 2 months old
and with the measles outbreak, I couldn’t see doing that. So I’m here.”
She is not alone. Many conversations
with young mothers confirm a widespread fear, thousands of infants now being
kept in homes all around California and not taken out because of concerns over
the dozens of measles cases that broke out when the illness spread from one
unvaccinated child at Disneyland.
“There is strong evidence that lower
vaccination rates are the reason for outbreaks of measles this year and for
outbreaks of pertussis (whooping cough) in 2010 and 2013,” said Pan, a
practicing pediatrician.
He’s not backing down in the face of
the death threats.
While
an assemblyman in 2012, Pan sponsored another bill aiming to make it harder for
parents to evade getting their children vaccinated before enrolling them in
public schools. Each parent declining vaccination, that law says, must present
written evidence of speaking with a health professional before declining
vaccinations for a child.
But when Gov. Jerry Brown signed that
bill, he attached a message asking state officials to create a new form
allowing parents to check off a box saying – without any proof – that
vaccinations run contrary to their religious belief. Never mind that no
organized religion disapproves vaccinations, which have all but ended onetime
scourges like measles, mumps, rubella and polio.
No link between that form and lower
vaccination rates – surveys have found as many as 38 percent of children are
unvaccinated in some nursery schools in Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay
area – has yet been firmly established. And Pan reports that under his previous
bill, the non-vaccination rate has dropped 20 percent statewide.
But the outbreaks make it clear that
more is needed, and Pan’s new law – backed by the California State PTA – would
remove all exemptions from vaccination for public school children other than
medical necessity. Children with problems like allergies or immune suppression
would remain exempt under this new proposed law, known as SB 277.
For
sure, anti-vaxxers declaiming their right to freedom are in fact denying
liberty to many thousands of children either too young or too allergic to be
vaccinated.
“This may be a sensitive issue for
some,” said state PTA president Colleen A.R. You. “However…the vaccines in use
today are extremely safe and effective.”
Pan notes that even his new law is not
a universal requirement for vaccination. “But if you don’t vaccinate your
child, you must take responsibility,” he said in an interview. “If you’re not
getting your kids vaccinated, you can still home school them, but you won’t be
putting them in with kids that are not getting vaccinated due to genuine
medical necessity.”
Pan says one reason for resistance to
vaccination is that many
parents have
never seen the diseases involved and so don’t consider them deadly. “Also,” he
said, “there’s misinformation that hypes discredited myths about things like a
link between vaccination and autism. The only study that claimed this turned
out to involve just 12 children and its methodology was extremely flawed. That
idea is just plain wrong and invalid.”
Pan doesn’t worry that Brown might
veto his new bill, which would eliminate the governor’s “check this box”
exemption allowing lazy parents to lie about religious beliefs.
“I’m sure I will sit down and talk
with the governor about this,” he said. “We will work with him.”
The bottom line is that recent medical
history demonstrates few new laws have ever been more needed than this one.
Brown rarely reveals in advance how he will act on any bill, but it would be a
dangerous travesty if he didn’t sign this bill and reverse his earlier miscue.
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Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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