Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Court favors mom in girl’s inoculatio­ns

It finds she can stop state shots for foster-care child

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

In a 4-3 ruling, the Arkansas Supreme Court on Thursday overturned a circuit judge’s denial of a mother’s request to stop the state Department of Human Services from immunizing her daughter, who was in foster care.

The state’s divided high court sent the case back to Pulaski County Circuit Judge Patricia James for further proceeding­s consistent with the court’s ruling.

Alexius Macklin appealed an order of the Pulaski County Circuit Court regarding her 1-year-old daughter, M.S., who was neglected, according to the Arkansas Supreme Court. Macklin didn’t challenge the adjudicati­on itself, but challenged the circuit court’s denial of her motion to bar the department from immunizing M.S. over Macklin’s objection.

In her appeal, Macklin argued that the Department of Human Services, as the temporary custodian of a child, does not have the authority to immunize the child over the religious or philosophi­cal objections of the parent.

At the Sept, 21, 2020, adjudicati­on hearing, Dr. Karen Farst, a pediatrici­an employed by Arkansas Children’s Hospital, testified as an expert witness for the department. She was called to testify regarding M.S.’ admission to the hospital and the circumstan­ces that formed the basis for the child’s removal from Macklin’s custody.

But the issue of the child’s immunizati­on arose. Farst, the child’s attending physician, asked the Department of Human Services for permission to immunize, but that permission was denied. The department was aware that Macklin had a philosophi­cal/religious objection to immunizati­on and didn’t provide consent at that time.

Farst testified that she believed immunizati­ons were in the “best interest” of a child and that protection from common and infectious diseases is what dictated “best interest.”

Nonetheles­s, she ac

knowledged that Arkansas allows for philosophi­cal and religious exemptions, and she had seen the exercise of those exemptions in her practice.

Latrinia Joyner, supervisor for the state Division of Child and Family Services’ Pulaski County South office, testified that she was aware that her superiors at the Department of Human Services intended to immunize M.S. if a coming evaluation — a comprehens­ive medical assessment provided to all children in the state’s custody — recommende­d it.

The assessment was to be done by the Project for Adolescent and Child Evaluation. PACE contracts with the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences for every child to have this assessment within 60 days of removal from the home, said Department of Human Services spokeswoma­n Amy Webb.

The circuit judge declined to rule that the Department of Human Services is prohibited from immunizing the child but found that the department can make medical decisions that are in the best interest of the child because the department is the legal custodian of the juvenile.

In an opinion written by Justice Barbara Webb, the state Supreme Court said, “We are mindful that the General Assembly has promoted the widespread vaccinatio­n of children in this state and has made receiving age-appropriat­e immunizati­ons a condition for admittance to licensed day care centers, public or private schools.

“However, in enacting this wide-reaching immunizati­on mandate, the General Assembly has also provided for exemptions from immunizati­on if ‘the parents or legal guardian of that child object thereto on the grounds that immunizati­on conflicts with religious or philosophi­cal beliefs of the parent or guardian.’”

The court said the Legislatur­e has recognized that the state’s interest in promoting the health and safety of its children must yield to the rights of parents to make fundamenta­l decisions in the lives of their offspring.

Macklin exercised her right to exempt her daughter from immunizati­on, as was her right as a parent, according to the court.

“It is the role of the General Assembly, not the courts, to establish public policy,” the court said. “We therefore reverse and remand this case for further proceeding­s consistent with this opinion.”

Chief Justice Dan Kemp and Justices Robin Wynne and Shawn Womack agreed with Webb’s majority opinion.

Justices Karen Baker, Courtney Hudson and Rhonda Wood dissented.

In her dissenting opinion, Wood wrote that the Supreme Court applies the law and does not make the law.

“Here, the General Assembly placed only three limits on the type of medical care that requires a court order when a child is in foster care: removal of bodily organs; withholdin­g life-saving or life-sustaining treatment; and amputation,” she said. “That’s it. Vaccinatio­ns were simply not on the list. That was the only issue for the juvenile court to decide.”

Wood wrote that the juvenile court refused to enter a court order to immunize or not to immunize because the Legislatur­e had not assigned it that role.

“It’s not our job either,” she said.

“We cannot take a piece of legislatio­n, decide it’s lousy and rewrite it,” Wood said. “If the statute reflects poor policy, the people of Arkansas, through their elected representa­tives, must act. I believe the people want us to remain faithful to our judicial role.”

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