State lawmakers are pushing for vaccine exemptions even as childhood
vaccination rates fall
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[January 28, 2025]
By SUSAN HAIGH and DEVI SHASTRI
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Vaccination bills are popping up in more than 15
states as lawmakers aim to potentially resurrect or create new religious
exemptions from immunization mandates, establish state-level vaccine
injury databases or dictate what providers must tell patients about the
shots.
Many see a political opportunity to rewrite policies in their states
after President Donald Trump's return to the White House and
anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 's nomination as the next
secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services. The agency
oversees virtually every aspect of vaccination efforts in the U.S., from
funding their development to establishing recommendations for medical
providers to distributing vaccines and covering them through federal
programs.
Childhood vaccination rates against dangerous infections like measles
and polio continue to fall nationwide, and the number of parents
claiming non-medical exemptions so their kids don't get required shots
is rising.
In 2024, whooping cough cases reached a decade-high and 16 measles
outbreaks, the largest among them in Chicago and Minnesota, put health
officials on edge. Most states are below the 95% vaccination threshold
for kindergartners — the level needed to protect communities against
measles outbreaks.
About half of Americans are “very” or “extremely” concerned that those
declining childhood vaccination rates will lead to more outbreaks,
according to a new poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public
Affairs Research. Yet only about 4 in 10 Americans oppose reconsidering
the government’s recommendations for widely used vaccines, while roughly
3 in 10 are in favor. The rest — about 3 in 10 — are neutral.
Scott Burris, director of Temple University’s Center for Public Health
Law Research, has tracked public health legislation for years, and
watched backlash against COVID-19 vaccines grow to include more routine
vaccines as anti-vaccine activists take hold of powerful political
pulpits.
“I think COVID and the politics gave standard vaccine denialists a lot
of wind in their sails," he said.
It's hard to predict what will pass into law in the states, Burris said,
considering the vast majority of proposed bills in any state go nowhere.
But the proposed legislation offers a glimpse into lawmakers’ thoughts,
and what else might follow.
Religious exemptions lead the pack
Religious exemptions for school vaccine requirements are among the most
popular proposals so far. Lawmakers in New York, Virginia, Connecticut
and Mississippi have introduced bills that would allow more people to
waive routine shots. Indiana lawmakers will weigh religious exemptions
for medical students.
Earlier this month, West Virginia Republican Gov. Patrick Morrisey
issued an executive order on his first day in office that enabled
families to receive religious exemptions from required school
vaccinations.
“That’s a huge step," said Brian Festa, co-founder of the law firm We
The Patriots USA, which works on vaccination-related cases throughout
the country. "That’s a state that never had a religious exemption.”
Now, only four states allow just a medical exemption from childcare and
K-12 immunization requirements: Connecticut, California, New York and
Maine.
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Festa credited West Virginia's new religious exemption to Trump's
nomination of Kennedy, as well as a 2023 federal court ruling that
required Mississippi to allow residents to cite religious beliefs when
seeking exemptions from state-mandated vaccinations for children.
“I think the writing’s on the wall and they did feel the pressure,”
Festa said of West Virginia.
In Connecticut, at least four Republican bills will try to revive the
state's religious exemption for schools, colleges and daycares —
something a contentious 2021 state law eliminated for students without
an existing exemption.
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 Connecticut health experts said at
the time there was a slow but steady increase in the number of
religious exemptions and declining vaccination rates in some
schools. The state has historically maintained some of the highest
childhood vaccination rates in the country, and in the 2023-2024
school year, more than 97% of kindergarteners protected against
chickenpox, measles, tetanus, diphtheria, polio and more.
Given that the U.S. Supreme Court last year
rejected a challenge to the Connecticut law and the statehouse is
controlled by Democrats, GOP state Sen. Eric Berthel said he’s not
optimistic legislative leaders will allow debate on his exemption
bill, but does believe the broader cultural shift means “maybe there
is a bit of an appetite to look at things like this again.”
“I think that we’re not being fair to families who have a true
faith-based reason to not vaccinate their child,” he said.
There's one outlier so far among statehouse trends on exemptions.
Hawaii, where legislators are looking to move in the opposite
direction with a bill to eliminate all non-medical waivers after
struggling for years with high exemption rates.
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Vaccine injuries and consent laws
Other vaccine-related bills touch on some of the opposition that's
been growing since the pandemic.
Oklahoma and Alabama have proposals that would require parental
consent for any vaccine given to minors. Bills in Wyoming, Oregon
and Oklahoma would prohibit “discrimination” against people who
aren’t vaccinated against COVID-19 or other diseases.
New York and Oklahoma have bills that would require providers to
give people getting shots a full ingredient list, and Florida
legislation would ban edible vaccines, though none are approved for
use in the U.S. and research is still in early stages.
Vaccine injury is also a popular topic, and bills in Indiana and
North Dakota propose creating state versions of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention's Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting
System — a federal database that drew the attention of vaccine
skeptics during the pandemic. Anyone can file a report about a
potential issue after a vaccine, though the CDC’s website notes a
report doesn’t prove the shot caused a health issue.
North Dakota Republican state Rep. Dick Anderson said he's not
against people getting vaccines — he got one COVID-19 shot himself —
but proposed the bill because many people don't trust the CDC.
“We have to do something to restore trust in the system," Anderson
said.
But experts note state databases are unnecessarily duplicative.
“A lot of these proposals, they're trying to fix something that's
not broken and really working to counter the goal of preventing the
spread of communicable disease,” said Andy Baker-White, senior
director of state health policy for the Association of State and
Territorial Health Officials.
Policy should be focused on getting rid of barriers to vaccination,
not adding to them, said Dr. Susan Kressly, a pediatrician and
president of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Many families miss vaccinations not because of ideology, she said,
but because of lack of transportation or not having primary care
doctors or clinics nearby, among other things.
But because most Americans are vaccinated, they haven't seen the
effects of dangerous infections like bacterial meningitis that
Kressly fielded calls about from fearful parents early in her
career.
"Vaccines are really an American success story," she said.
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Shastri reported from Milwaukee.
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