Chicago Sun-Times

A coronaviru­s-related lesson

Religious exemptions on child vaccinatio­ns need to go

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Should anybody need further evidence that an infectious, potentiall­y deadly disease can spread like wildfire, look no further than the coronaviru­s.

The global outbreak of this highly contagious virus should put antivaxxer­s — science-denying parents who refuse to allow their children to be vaccinated — to shame.

As we write this, almost 90,000 people worldwide, including five people in Illinois and 100 in the United States as a whole, have become infected with COVID-19. The global death toll is 3,331.

Fortunatel­y, the vast majority of people who contract the coronaviru­s will suffer only minor symptoms — fever, cough, shortness of breath — and recover quickly. And pharmaceut­ical companies are rushing to produce a vaccine to slow the virus’ spread, though it likely won’t be available for general use for more than a year.

The obvious lesson here is that vaccines, for all the pseudo-scientific claims to the contrary, are indispensa­ble to maintainin­g public health.

Witness influenza: Thanks to the flu vaccine, millions of Americans every year are able to avoid contractin­g the flu. Thousands of flu-related deaths are averted. And those numbers would improve greatly if more than 45% of adults got an annual flu shot.

NO ONE PARENT’S RELIGIOUS CONVICTION­S — OR ANTI-SCIENCE MILITANCY MASQUERADI­NG AS RELIGIOUS CONVICTION — SHOULD BE ALLOWED TO PUT SOMEBODY ELSE’S CHILD IN HARM’S WAY.

More unvaccinat­ed children

Then, in contrast, consider the alarming resurgence of measles in the United States. Last year, almost 1,300 cases of measles were reported, the largest outbreak in 27 years. In 2012, there were just 55 cases. Last year’s huge increase was largely the result of fewer children being inoculated because of fears about vaccinatio­ns that have been thoroughly debunked.

Meanwhile in Illinois, there are hundreds of schools where too few children have been vaccinated against easily preventabl­e childhood diseases like measles, mumps and chickenpox.

Medical profession­als say vaccinatio­n rates of at least 95% are necessary to protect a community at large, but vaccinatio­n rates in some Illinois schools are just 50% or lower. When healthy children are not vaccinated, all children — but especially those who cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons — are put in greater danger.

Religious exemptions from an Illinois law requiring vaccinatio­ns are soaring in number. From 2016 through 2019, according to data from the Illinois State Board of Education, measles vaccinatio­n exemptions rose from 15,652 to 19,169, polio exemptions rose from 15,130 to 18,690, and chickenpox exemptions rose from 16,050 to 20,244.

Stop soaring religious exemptions

We support legislatio­n, introduced by State Sen. Heather Steans, D-Chicago, to eliminate all religious exemptions to vaccinatio­ns, as called for by the American Academy of Pediatrics. No one parent’s religious conviction­s — or anti-science militancy masqueradi­ng as religious conviction — should be allowed to put somebody else’s child in harm’s way.

We urge the Legislatur­e to quickly pass Senate Bill 3668. And we urge Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who told us recently that he has taken no position on the bill, to sign it into law.

In doing so, Illinois would be joining five other states that already do not allow non-medical exemptions to vaccines: New York, California, Mississipp­i, West Virginia and Maine. Connecticu­t has taken steps this year to impose a similar ban.

As Steans points out, the courts have upheld such laws, ruling that in this matter public health trumps individual rights.

Steans’ bill also would also give minors who are 14 and older the right to be vaccinated without their parents’ consent. There’s precedent for that in Illinois law, which gives minors the power to consent to certain kinds of medical care, such as treatment for drug addiction and sexually transmitte­d diseases.

We can’t go back

The world is on edge as the coronaviru­s spreads, but nobody is really sure just how great the threat is.

We do understand, however, the very real danger of childhood communicab­le diseases such as polio and measles. And we know why many of these diseases are close to being eradicated — vaccinatio­ns.

We cannot allow that great good to be undone.

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