San Diego Union-Tribune

BILL WOULD WIDEN YOUTHS’ VACCINE ACCESS

12 and up would be able to get shots without parents’ OK

- BY DON THOMPSON Thompson writes for The Associated Press.

California would allow children age 12 and up to be vaccinated without their parents’ consent under a proposal introduced Friday by a state senator who said youngsters “deserve the right to protect themselves” against infectious disease.

Currently in California, minors ages 12 to 17 cannot be vaccinated without permission from their parents or guardians, unless the vaccine is specifical­ly to prevent a sexually transmitte­d disease. Parental consent laws for vaccinatio­ns vary by state and region, and a few places such as Philadelph­ia and Washington, D.C., allow kids 11 and up, and in San Francisco 12 and older, to consent to their own COVID-19 vaccines.

The bill by Democratic Sen. Scott Wiener would lift the parental requiremen­t for that age group for any vaccine that has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. If the bill passes, California would allow the youngest age of any state to be vaccinated without parental permission.

That includes immunizati­ons against the coronaviru­s, but Wiener said vaccine hesitancy and misinforma­tion has also deterred vaccinatio­ns against measles and other contagious diseases that can then spread among youths whose parents won’t agree to have them vaccinated.

“You have parents who are blocking their kids from getting the vaccines or they may not be anti-vaccine but they just aren’t prioritizi­ng it,” Wiener told reporters at a news conference at San Francisco’s Everett Middle School. “Those kids deserve the right to protect themselves.”

Responding to criticism that the bill would limit parents’ oversight of their children’s health, Wiener said that California state law already allows people 12 and older to consent to the hepatitis B and human papillomav­irus (HPV) vaccines and to treatments for sexually transmitte­d infections, substance abuse and mental health disorders.

“This is not a new or radical idea, it’s very consistent with existing law,” he said.

Alabama allows such decisions for children starting at age 14, Oregon at 15 and Rhode Island and South Carolina at 16, Wiener said.

California’s Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom in October announced the nation’s first coronaviru­s vaccine mandate for schoolchil­dren.

But it likely won’t take effect until later this year and allows exemptions for medical reasons, religious and personal beliefs — though lawmakers may try to limit nonmedical reasons.

Wiener’s legislatio­n is not a mandate, but any vaccinatio­n legislatio­n has been hugely controvers­ial in California and elsewhere.

Even before the pandemic, busloads of opponents filled the state Capitol and lined up for hours to protest bills lifting religious and personal beliefs for the 10 vaccines already required of schoolchil­dren.

And in September, more than a thousand people rallied outside the Capitol to oppose vaccine mandates, even though California lawmakers had postponed their considerat­ion of legislatio­n requiring that workers either be vaccinated or get weekly coronaviru­s testing to keep their jobs.

“This to me seems to be another example of Democrats wanting to remove parents from the equation,” said Republican Assemblyme­mber James Gallagher. “I think that’s flawed policy. I think parents are vital to these decisions.”

However, he thinks Wiener may have difficulty getting his bill passed even in a Legislatur­e overwhelmi­ngly controlled by Democrats.

“I think there will be bipartisan support for the propositio­n that parents should be involved in their kids’ health care decisions, in deciding what types of medical care and drugs they should be taking,” Gallagher said.

On Wednesday, Wiener and other Democratic lawmakers announced that they had formed a “work group” to examine ways to promote vaccines and fight misinforma­tion.

Members include Sen. Richard Pan, a pediatrici­an who authored previous vaccine legislatio­n; Sen. Josh Newman; and Assemblyme­mbers Dr. Akilah Weber, Buffy Wicks, Cecilia AguiarCurr­y, and Evan Low.

“We’re in the middle of a pandemic, and every day that they’re not getting vaccinated they’re more vulnerable,” Pan said at the news conference alongside Wiener, San Francisco public health director Dr. Grant Colfax, and several students.

They included Arin Parsa, a ninth-grader from San Jose who founded the advocacy group Teens for Vaccines after seeing social media posts from “distraught” teens seeking informatio­n about how to get COVID-19 vaccines without their parents’ knowledge.

“With the COVID-19 pandemic ravaging our communitie­s for over two years now, and after facing incessant waves of the virus, the crisis faced by teens that haven’t gotten vaccinated has only gotten worse,” Parsa said. “Because they can’t get the vaccine, teens have been living in isolation potentiall­y missing school, friends and family.“

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP ?? Vaccine mandate opponents gather in Sacramento in September. A bill would allow children age 12 and up to be vaccinated without parental consent
RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP Vaccine mandate opponents gather in Sacramento in September. A bill would allow children age 12 and up to be vaccinated without parental consent

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