Los Angeles Times

Close a vaccinatio­n loophole

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AFTER A MEASLES OUTBREAK at Disneyland in 2014, the California Legislatur­e eliminated the religious and “personal belief ” exemptions that allowed parents to easily opt their kids out of the immunizati­ons required to attend public school. It was a wake- up call, highlighti­ng how the anti- vaccinatio­n movement had been slowly eroding confidence in childhood immunizati­ons by scaring parents with discredite­d science and dubious data.

The political fight got ugly. But the law has been successful, quickly pushing up the statewide rate of school vaccinatio­ns to safer levels.

Now, amidst a new slew of measles outbreaks in the U. S. and abroad ( including one in Los Angeles County), the Legislatur­e is gearing up for a second round with the anti- vaccinatio­n movement, trying this time to tighten the rules on medical exemptions.

Public health experts suspect parents who object to having their children vaccinated turned to sympatheti­c doctors in order to obtain illegitima­te medical excuses after the state banned personal belief exemptions. After the personal belief law went into effect in 2015, medical exemptions for kindergart­ners jumped by 441%. Some of the increase may be legitimate, but the uptick neverthele­ss raised red f lags.

While an estimated 3% of any population is eligible for an exemption for health reasons, dozens of schools in California were re

porting that as many as 10% of their students had claimed medical exemptions.

It’s difficult for authoritie­s to figure out what’s going on because there’s no single agency tasked with checking to see if medical exemptions are valid, and there’s no database where exemptions are logged. A new bill by Sen. Richard Pan ( D- Sacramento), SB 276, would change that, if it can survive the pushback from vaccinatio­n opponents. A database is particular­ly crucial, as it would allow public health officials to determine whether individual physicians are writing a suspicious­ly high number of exemptions and revoke improper ones.

At a Senate committee hearing Wednesday, numerous critics of the bill said it intrudes unreasonab­ly in the relationsh­ip between patients and their doctors. That’s not true; it’s a check on physicians who might be compromisi­ng the health of the public at large by allowing parents to duck their children’s required immunizati­ons. When community vaccinatio­n rates drop, it makes it easier for measles to spread and puts at risk babies too young to be vaccinated and people with medical conditions that don’t allow them to receive immunizati­ons.

SB 276 is a reasonable, responsibl­e move to combat a serious health threat. So far in 2019, the U. S. has experience­d 626 cases of measles, more than any full year since 2000. Globally, measles cases are up 300% so far this year. Only vaccinatio­ns can reverse those trends.

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