Los Angeles Times

New school vaccine rules create confusion, uncertaint­y

- By Melody Gutierrez

SACRAMENTO — A pair of hotly debated new California laws limiting which schoolchil­dren can skip vaccines appears stuck in bureaucrat­ic limbo, the result of uncertaint­y over how to interpret last-minute changes made before the legislatio­n was signed last year by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Meanwhile, the state Department of Public Health, which is tasked with offering key guidance on the new vaccine laws, has been silent on the confusion over the rules.

Senate Bill 276 calls for the health department to create a standardiz­ed vaccine exemption form that doctors will electronic­ally submit to the state for review beginning next January. Newsom insisted on a second piece of legislatio­n — Senate Bill 714 — to ensure the new rules would be “implemente­d in an effective manner.”

While aspects of SB 714 significan­tly weakened the overall impact of the new law, other changes increased scrutiny of vaccine exemptions written by doctors who were discipline­d or are under investigat­ion by the Medical Board of California and Osteopathi­c Medical Board of California.

However, it’s unclear when that oversight begins.

“This should absolutely be happening now,” said state Sen. Richard Pan (DSacrament­o), the author of the vaccine legislatio­n.

But school nurses who review medical exemptions said that unless they receive guidance from the Public Health Department telling them otherwise, exemptions granted by scrutinize­d doctors will not be reviewed until 2021.

“I don’t think most school nurses understand this law,” said California School Nurses Organizati­on President Pamela Kahn. “When reading the law, I can see why you would assume it’s happening now, but that’s not happening now in the school community.”

Although the law allows the state to review medical exemptions written before Jan. 1 in cases in which the approving physician has been discipline­d by the medical board, it does not specifical­ly say when those reviews should begin. Most California statutes take effect on the first day of the year after approval by the governor. But several key provisions in the vaccine law specify that they should take effect in 2021, leading some to say that later date also applies to the new review process.

The statute also doesn’t indicate whether the review of a discipline­d doctor’s medical exemptions would be scrutinize­d automatica­lly once punishment is finalized, or if decisions to investigat­e would be made on a case-by-case basis. It’s also unclear if the disciplina­ry action that brings additional scrutiny must be related to immunizati­ons.

Only one doctor has been discipline­d for a vaccine-related case — Dr. Bob Sears, a well-known Orange County physician whose practice caters to parents who oppose some or all vaccinatio­ns. State public health officials declined to answer The Times’ questions on whether the law affects Sears’ previous medical exemptions.

The medical board put Sears on a 35-month probation in 2018 after charging him with committing gross negligence for failing to obtain the “basic informatio­n necessary” to determine whether a child should skip future vaccines. Last year, Sears faced a new complaint from the state medical board alleging that he wrote improper vaccinatio­n exemptions for children.

“If a physician has been discipline­d by the medical board for something related to inappropri­ate medical exemptions, as Dr. Bob Sears has been, then all of that doctor’s medical exemptions are now invalid,” Pan said of the law. “Schools should know that a child with a medical exemption written by Dr. Sears is now void.”

But Kahn said she’s waiting on guidance from the Public Health Department on how that part of the law should be implemente­d in schools. The laws were a primary concern at a recent school nurses associatio­n conference, she said.

Kahn said school officials can research which students have medical exemptions, but that in most cases, determinin­g which doctor wrote them would require pulling individual student files. If that is the expectatio­n, Kahn said, school nurses will need significan­t notice to complete that work. “That’s a lot of legwork,” she said.

Under SB 714, a doctor under investigat­ion by the Medical Board of California in a case involving vaccinatio­ns can’t write a new medical exemption unless the case is cleared in the doctor’s favor.

There are four doctors before the medical board with pending allegation­s related to immunizati­ons. They include Drs. Sears of Capistrano Beach, Ron Kennedy of Santa Rosa, Tara Zandvliet of San Diego and Kenneth Stoller of Santa Rosa.

Pan says that provision of the law is also effective now. But the language of SB 714 refers to a standardiz­ed form that has yet to be created by the health department.

Pan contends the intent of the law is still clear — doctors under investigat­ion should not be writing new medical exemptions.

The Public Health Department has until next January to create the form, which will be electronic­ally transmitte­d to the state’s immunizati­on registry for review — and possible rejection — by state health officials.

The health department declined to comment on its timeline for crafting the new document.

“Parents were promised that this fall, schools would be healthier and safer places,” said Leah Russin, executive director of Vaccinate

California, a key group that supported SB 276. “The department­s that the governor manages have not done anything to provide guidance for this year. At the end of the day, it seems what we have is a real challenge with the late changes made in SB 714.”

The health department said in a statement to The Times that the agency is “aware of the many steps and the timelines for implementa­tion.”

“The department is moving quickly to finalize the forms and the systems required to receive those forms,” the agency said. “Next steps are being determined within the guidelines outlined in the laws.”

“I feel confident [the Public Health Department] will get this done, but I think it could come down to the wire,” said Catherine FloresMart­in of the California Immunizati­on Coalition.

After officials have created the form and sent it to the immunizati­on registry next year, the department will then monitor which physicians are submitting medical exemptions.

The vaccine waivers are currently submitted directly to schools and local districts, making it difficult to determine how many medical exemptions a single doctor writes.

However, vaccine exemption data released by a handful of school districts in recent years showed that a few doctors wrote the majority of them.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? MARCHERS in Sacramento last year protest a vaccinatio­n exemption measure that ultimately passed.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press MARCHERS in Sacramento last year protest a vaccinatio­n exemption measure that ultimately passed.

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