California
Senate votes to end beliefs waiver for school vaccinations
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[May 15, 2015] By
Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - California
parents who do not vaccinate their children would have to home-school
them under a bill passed Thursday by the state Senate, the latest move
in a battle between public health officials and "anti-vaxxers" who fear
vaccines are dangerous.
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The bill, which eliminates the so-called personal beliefs exemption
allowing parents to forego vaccinations if opposed to them for any
reason, was introduced after a measles outbreak at Disneyland last
year that sickened more than 100 people.
"The personal beliefs exemption is endangering the public," said
Democratic state Senator Richard Pan, a pediatrician and co-author
of the bill. The measure still allows children to attend school
without vaccinations for medical reasons.
In recent years, vaccination rates at many California schools have
plummeted as parents, some of whom fear a link between vaccines and
autism, have declined to inoculate their children against such
diseases as polio and measles.
Although the vast majority of children are vaccinated, at some
schools, many in affluent, liberal enclaves, vaccination rates are
well below the 92 percent needed to maintain the group immunity
required to protect those who cannot be vaccinated for medical
reasons or who have weak immune systems.
“The alarming increase in unvaccinated students places everyone at
risk of contracting potentially fatal diseases," said state Senator
Ben Allen, a Democrat from Santa Monica, whose father suffered from
polio.
Parents who oppose mandatory vaccinations packed committee hearings
to testify against the bill, which stalled at one point but was then
revived.
Thursday's vote came after an hour of heated discussion among
senators, who voted 25-10, mostly along party lines, to support it.
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"It comes down to what do we as a society trade when we mandate that
somebody has to do something in order to protect somebody else,"
said Senate Republican leader Robert Huff, adding that his family
members are vaccinated. The measles outbreak did not rise "to the
level where we have to give up personal freedom."
But Allen said that 400 people die of measles every day in other
parts of the world.
"One child who is not immunized is not a big deal," he said. "But
more and more children not receiving vaccines allows for the
potential spread of diseases."
Under the bill, which still must be approved by the Assembly,
unvaccinated children who do not have a medical exemption would have
to study at home or in organized, private home-schooling groups.
(Editing by Eric Walsh)
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