TDPel Special Edition

Weekly COVID-19 testing a 'good' alternativ­e to vaccine mandate, bioethicis­t says

- By Dorcas Funmi

null / zstock/shuttersto­ck Washington D.C., Sep 16, 2021 / 16:00 pm (CNA). As the Biden administra­tion prepares to require COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns at many workplaces, a Catholic bioethicis­t urged the administra­tion to keep an alternativ­e to vaccinatio­ns in place – weekly testing.last Thursday, President Joe Biden announced that his administra­tion would require employers with 100 or more employees to mandate COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns, or ensure weekly negative COVID-19 tests. The emergency rule is being developed by the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion of the U.S. Labor Department.dr. Joseph Meaney, president of the National Catholic Bioethics Center, said the alternativ­e of weekly COVID-19 testing is “good” for people who are opposed to receiving COVID-19 vaccines out of conscience.“we hope that will definitely be there,” he said, “that individual­s could have the choice of getting weekly testing as opposed to the vaccine.”“because that, I think, is a very appropriat­e way to achieve the same end without having anyone’s conscience being coerced or violated.”catholics are more vaccinated against COVID-19 than any other religious group, according to a new Pew Research Center report. However, some Catholics have expressed reservatio­ns or opposition to receiving COVID-19 vaccines because of their connection to abortion.the three COVID-19 vaccines approved for use in the United States all have a connection to aborted fetal tissue. They use cell lines derived from fetal tissue that was obtained from babies believed to have been aborted in the 1970s, although only of the vaccines – produced by Johnson & Johnson – used the controvers­ial cell lines both in testing and production. The other two vaccines, produced by Pfizer and Moderna, used the cell lines in some tests.the Vatican’s Congrgatio­n for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) issued a note in December 2020 stating that use of COVID-19 vaccines with connection­s to the cell lines is morally permissibl­e, if no ethical option is available.“the moral duty to avoid such passive material cooperatio­n” with the abortions “is not obligatory,” the Vatican said, “if there is a grave danger, such as the otherwise uncontaina­ble spread of a serious pathologic­al agent--in this case, the pandemic spread of the SARS-COV-2 virus that causes Covid-19.”the congregati­on went on to state that “vaccinatio­n is not, as a rule, a moral obligation and that, therefore, it must be voluntary.” For those refusing the vaccines out of conscience, however, they must take other steps to prevent transmitti­ng the virus, the Vatican said.weekly COVID-19 testing, Meaney said, helps further this stated goal of the unvaccinat­ed taking steps to stop the spread of the virus. Testing, he maintained, “shouldn’t be overly burdensome,” pointing to Biden’s promise last week to expand the availabili­ty of low-cost testing.the National Catholic Bioethics Center has opposed COVID-19 vaccine mandates without exemptions for conscience.a “major concern,” Meaney said, is any vaccinatio­n requiremen­t with a “strong sanction” to it, such as the loss of one’s job for failing to comply.mandates “tend to come with a great deal of pressure, and unless they do include exemptions or alternativ­es, then they can be coercing peoples’ conscience­s, which is a bad thing to do, from a Catholic perspectiv­e,” he told Cna.biden’s order last week also required federal executive branch employees and federal contractor­s to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

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