California
bill ending 'beliefs' exemption for childhood vaccines advances
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[April 23, 2015]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) -
California's senate education committee approved a bill making it
mandatory for children to be vaccinated before starting school despite
opposition from “ant-vaxxer” parents who have packed public hearings and
flooded lawmakers with calls.
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The bill, which has already passed the senate health committee,
has several more hurdles to clear before becoming law. It next goes
to the senate judiciary committee, before going to the state senate,
and finally the assembly.
Under the bill, only children with medical waivers to opt out of
vaccinations would be exempted.
Most states, however, also allow parents to opt out if their
religion bans the protective procedure and about 20 allow personal
beliefs exemptions, which in recent years have been used by parents
who fear a now-debunked link between vaccines and autism, or worry
about other health effects of children receiving shots.
The bill under consideration in California would eliminate the
personal beliefs exemption, which would also have the practical
effect of eliminating any exemption based on religion.
Introduced in the wake of a measles outbreak that began at
Disneyland and infected 147 people last year, the bill stalled last
week in the senate education committee, after opponents said it
would unfairly deprive unvaccinated children of their right to an
education.
On Wednesday, it was approved by a vote of 7-2 after the authors
added a provision to allow unvaccinated children to participate in
group home-schooling environments.
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The proposed removal of the personal beliefs exemption in California
drew questions from representatives of some of the state's most
liberal enclaves, some of which are home to large clusters of
parents who worry that vaccinating their children according to the
recommended medical timelines could weaken their immune systems or
otherwise harm their health.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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