CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“VACCINATIONS AND THE GUV: WHAT WILL HE DO?”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“VACCINATIONS AND THE GUV: WHAT WILL HE DO?”
Now that the state Senate has
generally ignored the loud, repeated and unscientific outcries of
anti-vaccination crusaders, it’s likely the Assembly will fall into line this
summer and pass a law eliminating religious belief as an excuse for not getting
children inoculated before they enroll in public schools.
But will Gov. Jerry Brown sign this
strong new bill in the face of claims by anti-vaxxers that it interferes with
their freedom to make medical decisions for their children?
This question rises naturally from the
message Brown appended to his signature in 2012, the last time a strong
vaccination measure reached his desk. That law requires parents not vaccinating
their kids to produce evidence they have been briefed on the possible
consequences by a medical professional before making their decision.
It aims to reduce the numbers of
children not protected against onetime scourges like measles, mumps, rubella,
polio, smallpox, pertussis and other potentially deadly or debilitating
diseases that until a few years ago had been virtually eradicated from the
civilized world by vaccinations.
But Brown – fully aware that no
organized religion, not even Christian Science, has taken a stance
against vaccinations – nevertheless wrote this after his signature: “I
will direct the Department (of Public Health) to allow for a separate religious
exemption on the form…in this way, people whose religious beliefs preclude
vaccinations will not be required to seek a health practitioner's signature.”
So Brown, known for decades for
occasional inconsistencies, signed a bill requiring contact with health
personnel before parents could enroll any unvaccinated child in school, but
then gave them an easy way around the requirement. Talk about a meaningless
signature.
His aides tried to explain this away,
saying Brown’s order “does not countermand the law” and that he “believes that
vaccinations are profoundly important and a major public health benefit…we’ve
taken into account fundamental First Amendment religious freedoms through an
extremely narrow exemption.”
Actually, the exemption – in the form
of a box on a school enrollment form that any parent can check off without
having to prove either religious involvement or belief – is wide enough to
drive a truck through.
It is one possible reason for the
whooping cough outbreak of 2014 and the measles upsurge of last February,
although no one has tracked down the original patients who spread those
diseases, so no one can be absolutely certain.
But the simple reality is this:
Parents who claim individual freedom to make decisions for their children are
simultaneously trampling on the rights of many thousands of children whose
medical conditions preclude them from getting vaccinated. What about their
freedom from unnecessary dangers?
“We’ve examined the religious freedom
issue,” says Democratic state Sen. Richard Pan of Sacramento, a pediatrician
and the Legislature’s only medical doctor, the new bill’s co-author. “The
courts say vaccines are not a First Amendment issue and are within the
authority of states to impose. We do provide options, too. We demand that
parents who refuse to vaccinate take responsibility. They are free to home
school their kids. But they are not free to endanger others. There is a
compelling state interest in public health.”
The question is whether Brown will agree,
or whether he will listen to anti-vaccination parents who repeatedly cite a
late-1990s British study purporting to show vaccinations are linked to autism.
Not only was the research methodology shown to be invalid, but that so-called
study’s author later recanted.
This doesn’t stop anti-vaxxers, who
turned out in large, loud numbers for state Senate hearings and likely will for
upcoming discussions in the Assembly. Their appeals for personal freedom at the
expense of the freedom of many more others won over almost all state Senate
Republicans, only three GOPers voting for the vaccination bill. One was Sen.
Jeff Stone of Temecula, a longtime pharmacist well versed in the benefits of
vaccines.
With a Republican co-sponsor in the
Assembly, Pan hopes this won’t devolve into a mostly partisan quarrel there, as
it did in the Senate. Regardless, odds for Assembly passage appear good.
Which means Brown looms as the largest
potential obstacle to this much needed public health measure. If he doesn’t
reverse his earlier miscue, he can expect a full share of the blame each time
there’s a disease outbreak that could have been prevented by vaccinations.
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Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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