Los Angeles Times

REVISED VACCINE MEASURE SWAYS NEWSOM

Governor backs bill after lawmaker eases terms for medical exemptions, but foes object to changes.

- By Melody Gutierrez

SACRAMENTO — A key California lawmaker has amended contentiou­s vaccine legislatio­n amid a national measles outbreak, sharpening its focus on unscrupulo­us doctors while easing the list of medical conditions that physicians could cite in allowing schoolchil­dren to skip required immunizati­ons.

Tuesday’s amendments to Senate Bill 276 follow negotiatio­ns with Gov. Gavin Newsom, who raised concerns earlier this month that the bill would create an immunizati­on bureaucrac­y that could interfere with the doctor-patient relationsh­ip. With the changes, Newsom will now formally support SB 276, easing the bill’s chances as it makes its way through the state Legislatur­e.

“The governor would like to thank Dr. Pan for his leadership and for partnering with the administra­tion on these amendments,” said Health and Human Services Secretary Mark Ghaly, referring to Sen. Richard Pan, in a statement.

These amendments, Ghaly added, will ensure the bill “protects the doctor-patient relationsh­ip, strengthen­s the state’s ability to tar

get doctors who abuse the medical exemption process and gives state public health officials the tools to identify and protect schools and communitie­s where herd immunity is in danger.”

SB 276 by Pan (D-Sacramento) faces a vote in the Assembly Health Committee on Thursday, where it is expected to draw large crowds of opponents. If it passes there, the bill would go to the Assembly Appropriat­ions Committee, which is chaired by Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez (D-San Diego), a coauthor of SB 276. From there, the bill would go to the Assembly floor and, if passed, would return to the Senate, where the previous version of SB 276 passed last month.

The amendments Tuesday did not pacify groups opposed to the bill or the scores of parents who have flooded the Capitol to protest. Many parents took to social media, where they said the revised bill is worse, arguing that new penalties could have a chilling effect on the willingnes­s of doctors to write medical exemptions.

The opposition group Educate. Advocate wrote that the amendments were “verbose, contradict­ory and complex” and will only ensure “mass confusion and varied implementa­tion.”

“Doubling down on mandates with sweeping generaliza­tions and no considerat­ion for individual­ized medicine and health care will not yield compliance, but continue to foster distrust of public health officials and legislator­s at great cost to public education revenues in California,” the group said in a statement.

SB 276 would make it more difficult for doctors to exempt children from shots required to attend public or private school by granting the state Department of Public Health oversight authority.

The bill originally allowed for the health department to review and potentiall­y reject any child’s medical exemption approved by a doctor. As modified, SB 276 would allow for such reviews only at schools with immunizati­on rates of less than 95% or for doctors who grant five or more medical exemptions in a year.

A doctor would have to certify, under penalty of perjury, that the medical exemption is “true, accurate and complete.”

The bill is also less prescripti­ve on what medical conditions qualify for an exemption, including considerat­ion of family medical history. The bill now requires that an exemption “fall under the standard of care.”

In applying for a medical exemption, parents and doctors would have to agree to turn over a child’s medical record to prove that skipping all or some shots was warranted.

Anti-vaccinatio­n advocate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been actively fighting the “draconian proposal,” visiting the Capitol to lobby last week with actress Jessica Biel.

Many public health advocates support tougher immunizati­on laws, and a recent poll reported that 3 of 4 California­ns also support strong requiremen­ts amid a major measles outbreak that has infected more than 1,000 Americans.

But opponents of mandatory vaccinatio­ns for schoolchil­dren have been more active and vocal than proponents, leading to some of Tuesday’s amendments.

Among the amendments aimed at opponents’ concerns: Any medical exemption rejected by the state would have to be reviewed by a doctor in the state health department. Opponents had questioned the qualificat­ions of state employees who would be able to reject a doctor’s medical opinion.

California already has some of the strictest childhood vaccinatio­n laws in the U.S., with the state requiring immunizati­ons to attend public or private schools. A doctor can excuse a child from some or all vaccinatio­ns if there is a medical reason to do so, but questions have been raised about whether some doctors are improperly approving exemptions.

Pan, a medical doctor, has said the bill is needed to target “unscrupulo­us physicians” who are profiting off granting unneeded exemptions from vaccines. SB 276 would not allow a doctor to charge patients for filling out a medical exemption under the amendments.

“The first goal of the bill is to try to keep our schools safe,” Pan said in an interview last week. “We know the root of the problem are these physicians.”

Under the bill, the state would have the authority to bar certain doctors from writing medical exemptions for up to two years if the health department determined they posed a risk to public health. Doctors with pending investigat­ions by the Medical Board of California or Osteopathi­c Medical Board of California related to vaccines would also not be allowed to write new exemptions until they were resolved.

The state would track all rejected medical exemptions and share that informatio­n with the licensing boards.

“SB 276 is important legislatio­n that will protect our communitie­s by preventing outbreaks of preventabl­e disease,” said Leah Russin, executive director of Vaccinate California.

An opposition group made up of doctors and lawyers, Advocates for Physicians’ Rights, said it still has concerns about the state interferin­g with the doctor-patient relationsh­ip. Instead of making the bill more palatable, the group said, problemati­c provisions were added, such as limiting what fees a doctor could accept for providing medical exemptions.

“SB 276 is targeting the very profession­als who save our children’s lives,” the group said.

‘Doubling down on mandates ... will not yield compliance, but continue to foster distrust of public health officials and legislator­s.’ — Educate. Advocate, a group that opposes SB 276

 ?? Photograph­s by Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? OPPONENTS OF a plan to tighten rules for vaccine exemptions react at a hearing in Sacramento in May. The amended bill goes to an Assembly panel Thursday.
Photograph­s by Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press OPPONENTS OF a plan to tighten rules for vaccine exemptions react at a hearing in Sacramento in May. The amended bill goes to an Assembly panel Thursday.
 ??  ?? AMENDMENTS by Sen. Richard Pan, a medical doctor, came after the governor voiced concerns that the bill could impede the doctor-patient relationsh­ip.
AMENDMENTS by Sen. Richard Pan, a medical doctor, came after the governor voiced concerns that the bill could impede the doctor-patient relationsh­ip.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States