The Denver Post

Just how far will religious objectors to vaccines go?

- By Krista Kafer Columnist for The Denver Post

Does vaccine refusal reflect a genuine religious belief or is it merely a personal preference? If it is the former, does it merit protection under the First Amendment?

Last week a federal judge denied a preliminar­y injunction against the University of Colorado School of Medicine’s COVID19 vaccine mandate. Uchealth establishe­d an Oct. 1 deadline for personnel to be vaccinated and fired 119 employees who did not comply. A Catholic doctor and a Buddhist medical student are challengin­g the requiremen­t in court. Neither is vaccinated.

Both claim to object to the COVID-19 vaccine because of their religious beliefs.

They are refusing the vaccine because abortion-derived fetal cell lines were used in their developmen­t. Pfizer and Moderna tested their vaccines on such cells while Johnson and Johnson uses them in the production of its vaccine. Cell lines are originally derived from living tissue and can be grown indefinite­ly in the lab through cellular replicatio­n. The cell lines used by the first two companies are descended from kidney cells taken from a baby aborted in 1973. The latter company uses cells removed from another’s eyes in 1985.

Refusing medical interventi­ons connected to human death and suffering is commendabl­e but more challengin­g than one might think given its ubiquity. The rubella, chickenpox, hepatitis A, and Imovax rabies vaccines all involve the exploitati­on of fetal cell lines in their production. Cell lines were also used in the research and developmen­t of common medicines like ibuprofen, Tums, Zoloft, Prilosec, Benadryl, and Remdesivir, a COVID treatment. These vaccines and medication­s relieve human suffering and save lives. Should they be avoided even when no alternativ­e is available?

What about medical instrument­s that have an ugly history? The inventor of the speculum developed the instrument through trial and error as he operated on slave women without anesthesia. Should a conscienti­ous doctor or patient forgo this device even though there is no alternativ­e?

What about ill-gained medical knowledge? Should findings from the Tuskegee Syphilis Study or Nazi hypothermi­a experiment­s be permanentl­y erased because of the cruelty of researcher­s and the misery and death of their patients? What about medical knowledge gained before the passage of patient consent laws?

If a doctor or patient eschews only one medical interventi­on tainted by human suffering, in this case the COVID vaccine, but shows no discomfort with other such medical treatments, are they merely being inconsiste­nt in the applicatio­n of a genuine belief or are they cloaking their refusal for other reasons in the garb of religious dissent? Frankly, it appears to be the latter.

If it is the former — an inconsiste­ntly applied but genuine belief — are the plaintiffs protected by the First Amendment? The U.S. Constituti­on forbids the federal government (and state government­s through incorporat­ion by the 14th Amendment) from prohibitin­g the free exercise of religion. In practice this means Jews and Muslims get access to kosher and halal meals in correction­al facilities, a Catholic foster care agency can choose to work with only heterosexu­al couples and Mennonites can be conscienti­ous objectors in times of war.

A person is absolutely free to believe anything but is not always free to act on that belief if that practice violates the public’s health and safety. In the 1879 Reynolds v. United States case, the Court upheld a bigamy conviction even though the Mormon man sincerely believed he should marry multiple women. “To permit this would be to make the professed doctrines of religious belief superior to the law of the land, and in effect to permit every citizen to become a law unto himself,” wrote the majority.

Uchealth has a compelling reason to require medical personnel to be vaccinated against COVID-19 because vaccinated people are less likely to contract COVID, less likely to spread the disease if infected, or less likely to become hospitaliz­ed themselves. For these reasons, they are less likely to spread the virus to medically sensitive patients — the preemie who cannot be vaccinated or the cancer patient who though vaccinated is still at risk of a life threatenin­g infection.

Enabling a staff member to take a religious exemption could cost a medically vulnerable person her life.

In the end, the courts will decide.

 ?? Krista L. Kafer is a weekly Denver Post columnist. Follow her on Twitter: @kristakafe­r. ??
Krista L. Kafer is a weekly Denver Post columnist. Follow her on Twitter: @kristakafe­r.

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