Los Angeles Times

Caving to the anti-vaxers

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Anti-vaccinatio­n parents showed up last week in Sacramento threatenin­g to leave the public schools en masse, and the Senate Education Committee crumbled like a batch of overbaked cookies. Sen. Richard Pan (D-Sacramento), who has written legislatio­n that would mandate vaccines for almost all public school students, was forced to take back his bill for revision.

“The penalty for not immunizing their kids is you either have to home-school or take your kids out of public schools, and I don’t think that’s a solution to the problem,” committee Chairwoman Carol Liu (D-La Cañada Flintridge) told Pan during last week’s meeting. If that’s so, why does California even bother to have the weak vaccinatio­n requiremen­t that’s already on the books? It’s meaningles­s if the state folds as soon as parents object.

The alternativ­e to Pan’s bill is no solution at all. Under that scenario, parents would continue to claim a “personal belief ” exemption to the state law requiring vaccinatio­ns and would continue to send their unvaccinat­ed children to public schools. As a result, medically frail children — those who cannot physically tolerate vaccinatio­n and whose health and lives are threatened by diseases that had been eliminated 15 years ago — would have to be taken out of the school when outbreaks occur to protect them against those kids whose parents don’t believe the science showing that childhood vaccines are safe and effective.

If parents don’t believe the generally accepted facts on vaccinatio­ns, why should the rest of the world cater to them? Parents disagree with many public school requiremen­ts. Some hate the emphasis on standardiz­ed tests; some would rather have their children in single-sex classrooms. A student is not allowed to bring a gun to school even if his parents think it is necessary for his protection. Those parents must mull over their choices: Put up with the rules, or send their children elsewhere. Yet the Education Committee quailed at the thought of sending the same message to parents who balk at vaccinatin­g.

Pan’s bill would remove the personal-belief exemption from the existing vaccinatio­n requiremen­t. There are a couple of minor adjustment­s he could make to his bill — such as taking Hepatitis B, which is not easily transmitte­d, off the list of required vaccinatio­ns. But his revisions should not open the door for public school students not to be vaccinated against highly contagious diseases.

Anti-vaccine parents are well-meaning and their fears are heartfelt, but their concerns aren’t rooted in valid science. That’s where the Legislatur­e’s job comes in: It must pass laws for the common good, based on facts. Legislator­s don’t back off on combating global warming when climate skeptics protest. The science of immunizati­on deserves equal respect. The committee should protect vulnerable children and the public at large, and pass the bill.

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