The Mercury News

Experts debate next step in fight for childhood vaccinatio­ns.

Result has left some counties below rate needed for ‘community immunity’

- By Elizabeth Aguilera

Three years after California stopped allowing families to easily opt out of childhood vaccines, the number of kids getting medical waivers has tripled — the result, critics say, of some doctors loosely issuing exemptions to help families get around the law.

The decrease has left some counties, including Nevada and Plumas, below the recommende­d vaccinatio­n rate required for “community immunity” against dangerous diseases such as measles and whooping cough.

And the number of medical exemptions will continue to rise unless the state clamps down, warns a study in the journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics. The authors interviewe­d local public health officers across the state, some of whom complained of doctors charging fees in exchange for writing exemptions.

This winter — as an outbreak of measles strikes several states that allow parents to opt out of vaccinatin­g their children because of personal or philosophi­cal objections — California is one of three states that allow only medical exemptions. Since the law was enacted, California’s vaccinatio­n rate has risen more than 2 percent. It’s now just over 95 percent, above the 94 percent rate the state health department says should be sufficient to protect those who can’t be vaccinated, but regional pockets of the population remain at risk.

Legislator­s and health experts are debating what to do next. One proposal would be modeled on an existing state requiremen­t that any veterinari­an seeking to exempt a sick dog from rabies vaccinatio­n must obtain approval from a health official.

“We delegated that authority to licensed physicians, and the problem is we have physicians abusing that authority,” said Democratic state Sen. Richard Pan, a Sacramento-area pediatrici­an who authored the state’s controvers­ial ban on personal waivers after a measles outbreak originatin­g at Disneyland infected 136 people. “I think we need the health department­s to basically say when some-

one is abusing that authority—and to withdraw that authority and invalidate exemptions that were fraudulent.”

State Public Health Department data shows medical exemptions among kindergart­ners rose to now represent 0.7 percent statewide in the last school year, from 0.2 percent two years earlier—an uptick largely in private schools, where more than 1 in 50 students now have a medical waiver from the vaccinatio­n law. All told, 4,111 California kindergart­eners had permanent medical exemptions from vaccinatio­n in the last school year, out of more than a half-million kindergart­eners enrolled.

Other ideas under state discussion:

• Creating a new review process and oversight managed by local public health officials

• Giving local public health officials authority to review exemptions

• Collecting data on physicians granting exemptions

• Invalidati­ng exemptions and remove authority from physicians who are found in violation

Pan has yet to propose a legislativ­e remedy, saying he is working with the state health department and the California Medical Board on how to deal with physicians who may be in violation.

The California Medical Associatio­n, a doctors’ organizati­on that supported eliminatin­g the personal exemption, is again working with Pan. The organizati­on supports “having standards in place to make sure the medical exemption system is not being abused,” said associatio­n spokesman Anthony York.

But critics say any new rules would amount to overkill by lawmakers, who had promised to leave medical exemptions to the discretion of doctors.

“The state is inserting itself in between the patientdoc­tor relationsh­ip,” said Rebecca Estepp, an advocate who campaigned against jettisonin­g the personal waiver and calls the increase in medical waivers “nothing.”

She attributes most of the rise to the fact that many parents whose children qualified for a medical exemption used to just sign a personal exemption card because it was easier.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control urges vaccinatio­ns for the vast majority of children, saying they are generally safe, and that the benefits of protection against potentiall­y fatal disease are worth the risk. It acknowledg­es that vaccines can cause side effects, ranging from the most common like soreness and fever to, in rare cases, seizures and brain damage.

Federal guidelines advise avoiding or delaying certain vaccines for children with compromise­d immune systems, and those with a personal or family history of seizures, or those who have experience­d encephalop­athy after receiving a vaccine. California law also allows family medical history to be taken into account.

The October study in Pediatrics reported that most California county and city health officers and immunizati­on staff reported said few or no problems with medical exemptions. But other staffers did report problems, noting that said some doctors were listing questionab­le conditions such as a family history of allergies, or charging fees in exchange for writing exemptions, or charging families for medical tests to establish family history and exemptions signed by doctors who do not usually treat children.

Under California’s law, physicians are allowed to take family medical history into considerat­ion and to use their expertise to decide what qualifies as an exemption.

Kenneth Stoller, a former board-certified pediatrici­an who is now an integrativ­e physician in San Francisco, opposed the law eliminatin­g personal waivers for childhood vaccines. Now he advertises on his website that he will see families seeking exemptions and will consider issuing one after an exam and a full family medical history consultati­on.

He argues that public health officials should not become the arbiters of medical exemptions.

“I and my colleagues would object to that because we practice medicine. This needs to be approached on an individual personal medical basis,” Stoller said. “Public health department­s are not practicing medicine. They are far more administra­tive and bureaucrat­ic. They are also constraine­d by one of their main funding sources— the CDC.

More than half of the state’s Public Health budget is from federal funds.

Lawmakers may be reluctant to invite a sequel to the turbulent Capitol fight four years ago over vaccinatio­ns exemptions; instead they may urge state regulators to more aggressive­ly crack down on dubious medical exemptions. If a new law is proposed, Estepp said, legislator­s should expect to see vocal parents and advocates who oppose tighter vaccine regulation flood their offices like they did last time.

CALmatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media venture explaining California policies and politics.

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