The Mercury News

Things to know about new vaccine law

- By Elizabeth Aguilera Calmatters

SACRAMENTO >> California has a new vaccinatio­n law on the books. It cracks down on inappropri­ate use of medical exemptions that allow kids to skip some or all vaccines and still enter school. It gives power over the exemption process to public health officials and will create a vaccinatio­n database of all children with medical dispensati­on.

Supporters of the law are pleased that doctors will no longer be the final authority on medical exemptions and could be investigat­ed if they write too many. The more children who get vaccines, the safer schools will be for all kids, the proponents say.

Critics fear the law will effectivel­y shut down access to waivers for kids who could be harmed by vaccines, which carry some risk, or who need them for other medical reasons. Doctors may fear the investigat­ive provisions of the law, opponents say, and thousands of children could even be tossed out of school if they are not fully up-todate on vaccines.

Here are some things to know about the law, which goes into effect Jan. 1.

What does the new law do?

In California, children are required to be vaccinated, or have a medical exemption, to attend school.

The new law creates a review process that gives public health officials the final say on those waivers, with the authority to reject them. Reasons for medical exemptions must still follow strict guidelines, and doctors will now be barred from charging any fees for exams or forms related to such dispensati­on.

Democratic state Sen. Richard Pan, the law’s author, said he was concerned when the number of medical waivers rose across the state after a previous law that he wrote eliminated personal-belief exemptions in 2016 but kept medical exemptions intact. Pan said his goal this year was to keep physicians from issuing waivers for pay or for reasons that are not allowed.

The law, signed by the governor Monday, requires doctors to examine patients and submit their recommenda­tions to the state Department of Public Health. State officials will then cross-check recommenda­tions against guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control’s Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices or the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Starting next year, parents will continue to get waiver letters from doctors, as they do now, and submit them to schools. Starting in 2021, the state is to have a standardiz­ed form and a new submission process: Doctors will send exemptions directly to the state for review and disseminat­ion to schools.

Once the law takes effect in January, a state health official will begin reviewing all medical exemptions at schools in which fewer than 95% of students are vaccinated, from doctors who submit five or more exemptions in one year and from schools that have not shared vaccinatio­n rates with the state.

How did we get here?

Vaccinatio­ns have been a hot issue in California for several years, even though nearly 95% of kindergart­ners were fully vaccinated in the last school year. At the same time, the portion of kindergart­ners with medical exemptions has been rising since personal-belief exemptions were eliminated. Last year 0.9% of kindergart­ners — 4,812 of them — had exemptions. In some places rates are higher: The legislatio­n notes that 16 counties had kindergart­en vaccinatio­n rates lower than 90% in the last school year.

Pan’s latest proposal brought opposition groups to the capital for weeks in protest. They were out in such force they sometimes essentiall­y shut down meetings and regularly scheduled operations in the Capitol building. Advocates for Physicians’ Rights, Physicians for Informed Consent and parents from across the state testified against the bill in committee hearings, saying their children had been injured by vaccines, they didn’t want to be required to obtain more immunizati­ons, their children had autoimmune disorders or similar conditions and they feared doctors would no longer be willing to provide exemptions.

Opponents did the same in 2015, when Pan first proposed eliminatio­n of personal-belief exemptions. At that time he agreed that a medical exemption is absolutely up to a physician and argued that parents would be able to find a practition­er to sign a form, so when he went after those waivers this year the opposition fought back again.

The vast majority of kids are vaccinated, so what’s the big deal?

A state Department of Public Health’s review shows that California’s vaccinatio­n rates are high: 94.8% of kindergart­ners in the last school year were vaccinated, a slight decrease from the year before. A slight increase in medical dispensati­ons is simply families with previous personal-belief exemptions switching to medical waivers, say parents who oppose the new law.

Supporters of the new law, including the California Medical Associatio­n and the American Academy of Pediatrics in California, say it will strengthen community immunity and vaccines are safe and effective for keeping communitie­s healthy. And it will crack down on physicians “practicing outside the accepted standard of care,” David Aizuss, president of the medical associatio­n, said in a written statement.

The concept of community immunity is that if enough children are vaccinated, those for whom vaccines are ineffectiv­e or who cannot be vaccinated for health reasons — they have autoimmune diseases or are being treated for cancer, for example — will be protected because everyone around them is vaccinated. This is also known as herd immunity.

“The CDC itself warns that there are risks involved with vaccinatio­ns, and where there is risk, there should at least be a discussion between a doctor and a patient, like with any other pharmaceut­ical,” she said. “This bill is nothing more than government overreach…. doctors were scared to write (medical exemptions) before this bill; this is just creating an additional killing effect.”

Are vaccines dangerous, as some critics say?

Critics of the new law argue that it does not properly acknowledg­e the risk in vaccines. The law states that “for all but a small number of individual­s, immunizati­ons are safe and effective,” but does not elaborate. Other opponents say the new requiremen­ts ignore the real needs of children who have been injured by vaccines and could be further harmed if forced into more. For example, they could have allergic reactions to vaccine components or have other underlying health conditions.

Vaccinatio­ns also can have side effects, ranging from fevers and seizures to very rare cases of death, according to the literature included with the medication­s and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 1986, the federal government created the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act, that freed pharmaceut­ical companies from liability in cases of such injury. Under that law, billions of government dollars have been paid to families with children harmed by vaccines.

The group Physicians for Informed Consent, which opposes California’s new law, says it is partly based on misinforma­tion. The organizati­on argues that some of the vaccines required for school are for illnesses that are not contagious and therefore do not affect herd immunity or other children. Those include immunizati­ons against tetanus and Hepatitis B, which is first administer­ed to newborns for an illness transmitte­d through sex and intravenou­s drug use.

Opponents also point to the Vaccine Adverse Effects Registry and the National Vaccine Injury Compensati­on Program as evidence that vaccinatio­n decisions should be left to physicians.

So is this fight over now?

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a vocal opponent of the California law, said at a rally Monday that his organizati­on, Children’s Health Defense, intends to sue the state to block the law. And a group of opponents has begun the process of trying to overturn the new law through a ballot measure that would go to voters next year.

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