Medicine Hat News

Scholars say religious vaccine objections can’t be traced to Biblical sources

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TORONTO

The medical arguments for vaccinatin­g children against infectious diseases are overwhelmi­ng, but they still fail to convince a significan­t number of parents who seek exemptions in provinces that require shots for kids in school.

It’s the reason Toronto Public Health is now asking Ontario to no longer allow people to opt-out for religious or philosophi­cal reasons - objections that some scholars claim can’t actually be traced to Biblical or academic sources.

“The truth is, no major religion objects to vaccines,” says University of Guelph philosophy professor Maya Goldenberg, who has written a book on vaccine hesitancy due in 2020.

“There are sects within the major religions, like some evangelica­l churches, or even sects of Judaism and other religions that have determined that they do not vaccinate but it’s not grounded in religious doctrine, it’s more about the interpreta­tion of doctrine.”

Nor does Goldenberg believe there are philosophi­cal objections if that’s understood to mean ideas “grounded in some kind of philosophi­cal framework.” She prefers to describe such views as “personal beliefs” or “conscienti­ous objections.”

“It might be grounded in some philosophi­cal ideas about nature and privilegin­g of naturalnes­s over artificial medical interventi­on, but there isn’t really a philosophy of vaccine refusal.”

Debate over the validity of non-medical exemptions has flared anew as Toronto Public Health presses the province to drop current allowances for religious and personal beliefs. A spokeswoma­n says a letter was sent to the health ministry this week, as were similar letters to health partners including Health Canada, the Registered Nurses’ Associatio­n of Ontario, and all Toronto school boards.

Vaccinatio­ns are a requiremen­t to attend class in Ontario and New Brunswick, while British Columbia launched a demand this fall that students report immunizati­on records. Back in February, a measles outbreak in Vancouver raised concerns about threats to herd immunity, which requires 95 per cent of a community to be vaccinated.

In Ontario, provincial data does not specify which exemptions are based on religion versus personal beliefs, but together they vastly outnumber exemptions based on medical reasons. Ontario Public Health data from the 2017-18 school year found roughly 2.5 per cent of seven-year-olds were exempted from immunizati­ons for non-medical reasons versus roughly 0.2 per cent who were exempted for medical reasons.

Len Riemersma, a pastor at Maranatha Christian Reformed Church in Bowmanvill­e, Ont., says he’d prefer the word “religious” not be associated with exemptions at all, since he, too, knows of no Biblical reason to oppose vaccines.

While he believes God uses many different means to bring about healing - including medicine - he says others believe they should “rely only on God.”

“It’s the small little groupings here on the outskirts and on the margins that say, ‘Oh, it’s this way.’ And then somehow it becomes a religious issue when in most cases, it’s not - it’s an interpreta­tion issue. And to lump it all as religious is kind of unfair to the mainstream groups,” says Riemersma.

Neverthele­ss, he cautions against the province wading into religion, worrying it could be a “slippery slope” to infringing on religious and other Charter rights.

“For one institutio­n to say, ‘Well, we can tell the religious community what they can and cannot do,’ then where does that stop? I’m a little afraid of that,” he says. “As soon as one says, ‘Well, we can dictate what’s going on,’ then you’re on dangerous ground as far as I’m concerned.”

The intrusion of government is of special concern to many who oppose mandatory vaccines, says one anti-vaccinatio­n advocacy group.

“No one, including the government, has the right to insist that another person, or another person’s child, be injected with anything,” Vaccine Choice Canada states in a one-page explainer provided by email.

“Vaccine mandates ignore our right to informed consent, security of the person, self-autonomy and bodily integrity, which includes the fundamenta­l human right to decide what one allows, or doesn’t allow, into oneself and one’s children.”

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? A nurse administer­s a vaccinatio­n to a child in this file photo.
CP FILE PHOTO A nurse administer­s a vaccinatio­n to a child in this file photo.

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