Los Angeles Times

Despite tough vaccine rules, crackdown lags

California has yet to punish any doctor for writing unnecessar­y medical exemptions.

- By Soumya Karlamangl­a

A year ago, California officials appeared to be coming down hard on doctors and parents who were reluctant to vaccinate children.

The state had just implemente­d one of the strictest vaccinatio­n laws in the nation. The medical board was threatenin­g to pull the license of Dr. Robert Sears, a celebrity in the anti-vaccine community.

One vaccine skeptic called the case against Sears “a shot across all the doctors’ bows.”

But so far, no doctors, including Sears, have been punished for writing unnecessar­y medical exemptions. The crackdown many foresaw never materializ­ed.

Public health advocates are still concerned that doctors are writing improper exemptions to get kids out of vaccines. The number of children with medical exemptions tripled last year,

and dozens of complaints against physicians have been filed with the Medical Board of California.

But the way California law addresses medical exemptions has created a challenge for officials, experts say. It leaves the decision of whether a child should be allowed to skip vaccines fully up to the doctor.

Some websites aimed at parents worried about vaccines suggest that doctors could write exemptions for children if they have a family history of asthma, diabetes, eczema or ADHD.

“Is it an abuse? Of course it’s an abuse,” said UC Hastings law professor Dorit Reiss. “The law left discretion to the doctors and of course that means doctors can abuse that discretion.”

California’s tough inoculatio­n law was enacted in 2015 after a measles outbreak that originated at Disneyland. Health officials said the outbreak was fueled by high numbers of unvaccinat­ed children.

The new law, known as SB 277, prevents parents from citing religious or other personal beliefs to get out of vaccinatin­g their children. Now children must have a doctor’s note if they don’t have their shots.

Thousands of parents who had been citing personal beliefs to get out of vaccinatio­ns took their kids to get their shots after the law took effect, pushing up overall vaccinatio­n rates.

But some schools continue to have dangerousl­y low rates of vaccinated children, in large part because many students got new medical exemptions.

“There are still pockets where that number is lower,” said Santa Barbara County health officer Dr. Charity Dean, “and those pockets are vulnerable.”

At 58 schools in the state, 10% or more kindergart­ners had medical exemptions last fall. Doctors say that at most, 3% of people could have a medical reason for not tolerating vaccines, such as a gelatin allergy or because they’re undergoing chemothera­py.

In Santa Barbara County, Dean created a program to assist school staff in reviewing exemption forms. But they can verify only whether there’s actually a doctor’s signature on the form, or whether the physician specified if the exemption is for one vaccine or all — not the rationale for the exemption itself.

“Our role as a public health department is not to assess whether or not a medical reason is valid,” Dean said.

Under California law, no regulatory body is charged with vetting the validity of medical exemptions. Doctors also don’t have to follow specific criteria when deciding a child qualifies for exemption, other than their own profession­al judgment.

“It’s very soft,” said Dr. Jay Gordon, a pediatrici­an in Santa Monica. “My interpreta­tion of a valid medical basis may be different than another doctor’s.”

Online, some doctors advertise consultati­ons in which, for a fee, they’ll evaluate a child’s eligibilit­y for an exemption. Many list reasons a child could qualify, including asthma and skin conditions such as psoriasis, which experts say should not make children unable to handle vaccines.

“There’s some really unscrupulo­us doctors,” said Dr. James Cherry, a UCLA research professor and primary editor of the “Textbook of Pediatric Infectious Diseases.”

In West Virginia, one of the other two states that banned personal belief exemptions, state officials have to sign off on every medical exemption form. The proportion of children in West Virginia with medical exemptions is four times smaller than in California.

The medical board’s accusation against Sears said he didn’t obtain a detailed history of previous vaccines and reactions before determinin­g that a 2-year-old boy should be exempt from further childhood vaccinatio­ns.

Sears said the child had suffered severe vaccine reactions and needed a medical exemption, according to his attorney, Richard Jaffe.

Sears, a pediatrici­an in Orange County and one of the leading voices of the anti-vaccine community, has a medical board hearing scheduled for May. The board could suspend his license or take other disciplina­ry action if it finds wrongdoing.

In addition to the complaint that launched the Sears investigat­ion, 51 others have been filed against physicians who are accused of improperly writing exemptions in the last three years, said Jennifer Simoes, chief of legislatio­n for the state medical board.

About half have been investigat­ed and closed without any disciplina­ry action, while the others are still pending, she said.

Cases can take years to investigat­e, said Reiss, the law professor. And because parents receiving medical exemptions have requested them, they would be unlikely to file complaints against the doctor. An unusual circumstan­ce would have to bring the issue to light, she said.

Joshua Rice filed a complaint with the medical board last year alleging that his former wife got medical exemptions for a fee from Sears for their two oldest children. In the complaint, Rice wrote that his children, now ages 9 and 10, don’t have any allergies or family history that make vaccines dangerous for them. Yet his former wife got letters from Sears excusing them from all childhood vaccines, he wrote. (She declined to comment.)

Rice said in the complaint that Sears never met or examined the kids.

Sears denied ever granting medical exemptions without an in-person office visit, and “requires an extensive in-person evaluation before any such medical exemption is considered,” Jaffe said in an email.

Some parents said the attention on Sears and doctors has scared physicians.

Rebecca Estepp, who is part of an advocacy group that opposed SB 277, said her oldest child had a serious reaction to a vaccine that included swelling of his brain. She fears other family members could have the same genetic predisposi­tion.

Estepp said she thinks some physicians aren’t writing exemptions, even for valid reasons. Since the law took effect, two complaints have been filed with the medical board against doctors refusing to write vaccinatio­n exemptions, according to board officials.

“They’re too afraid to put their neck out and possibly put themselves in a way that they could be scrutinize­d,” Estepp said.

State Sen. Ben Allen (DSanta Monica), one of the law’s coauthors, said he called the medical board after he heard that some doctors had received letters about guidelines set by the law. Some doctors saw the letters as a warning. Officials from the medical board would not confirm the letter was mailed out.

“The fact of the matter is we don’t need a 100% vaccinatio­n rate, we just need to up the numbers,” Allen said. “I certainly will not support any attempt by the medical board to try to intimidate doctors.”

Gordon, the Santa Monica pediatrici­an, agreed that some doctors are shaken by the medical board’s actions, but pointed out that Gov. Jerry Brown’s signing message for SB 277 specifies that exemptions are left up to “the judgment and sound discretion of the physician.”

Gordon thinks the law unfairly took away parents’ rights, so he’s doing his best to respect their wishes, he said.

“The law puts it completely at my discretion. It makes the decision mine, which I don’t think is correct, but I can live with that,” he said.

 ?? David McNew For The Times ?? RAVEN SUMMERS, 4, gets a vaccinatio­n with her mother, Jessica, at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.
David McNew For The Times RAVEN SUMMERS, 4, gets a vaccinatio­n with her mother, Jessica, at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.
 ?? Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times ?? DR. ROBERT SEARS, a celebrity in the anti-vaccinatio­n community, has a medical board hearing in May.
Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times DR. ROBERT SEARS, a celebrity in the anti-vaccinatio­n community, has a medical board hearing in May.

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