The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Cleveland State to require coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns

- By Andrew WelshHuggi­ns Associated Press writers Andrew DeMillo in Little Rock, Arkansas, and Bryan Anderson in Raleigh, North Carolina, contribute­d to this report.

COLUMBUS >> Cleveland State University said Thursday it will continue to require that students living on campus be vaccinated against the coronaviru­s despite a new law prohibitin­g public schools and colleges in Ohio from mandating the vaccine.

The school, the only public university in the state with such a requiremen­t, said the mandate will continue since the fall term begins Aug. 21 and the law doesn’t take effect until October.

“Over the last three semesters, our students, faculty, and staff have worked hard to keep our community safe,” said spokespers­on Allison Bibb-Carson. “As a result, Cleveland State University achieved one of lowest infection rates among urban universiti­es in the country.”

About 1,000 Cleveland State students live on campus out of a total enrollment of nearly 16,000 students. Medical and religious exemptions are available, Bibb-Carson said.

The university said it would comply with the law once it takes effect.

The bill signed into law Wednesday by Republican Gov. Mike DeWine and aimed at the coronaviru­s vaccine bans public schools and colleges from requiring individual­s to receive vaccines not granted full approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion.

The bill, which takes effect Oct. 12, would also prohibit individual­s who don’t receive emergency use vaccines from being denied the chance to participat­e in school activities such as sports.

DeWine signed the legislatio­n just hours after his top medical advisor warned that vaccinatio­n trends have led to the developmen­t of “two Ohios” when it comes to combating the coronaviru­s, increasing vulnerabil­ity to the disease’s highly contagious delta variant.

A day before signing the bill, the governor said the FDA needs to move coronaviru­s vaccines from emergency use authorizat­ion to full approval as soon as possible. He said the emergency element is leading to vaccine hesitancy in the state.

On Thursday, a DeWine spokespers­on said the governor is confident the ban won’t be needed for long.

The prohibitio­n “was limited to vaccines that do not have full FDA approval,” said Dan Tierney. “We are confident that these vaccines, proven repeatedly to be very safe and very effective, will be approved by the FDA, thus rendering this issue moot.”

Moderna and Pfizer have both begun the process to win full regulatory approval.

Last month, Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchison also called on the FDA to issue full approval, saying the lack of it was leading to vaccine hesitancy in his state.

“We need to get that research completed so it can be final approval — I think that will help,” Hutchison said on CBS’ Face the Nation.

In North Carolina on Thursday, Dr. Mandy Cohen, the state’s top public health official, called the vaccines safe and effective and subject to rigorous clinical trials and review before their implementa­tion.

“I’m hoping the FDA is working as rapidly as possible to get to full approval for the vaccine,” said Cohen, the state’s Health and Human Services secretary.

A handful of private colleges in Ohio that are requiring students to be vaccinated, including Ohio Wesleyan University in Delaware and Kenyon College in Gambier, won’t be affected by the law.

“We continue to believe that immunizati­on is the best way to promote the health of our community,” said Kenyon spokespers­on Janet Marsden.

The Ohio prohibitio­n was a last-minute GOP addition to a bill aimed at minimizing disruption­s for children of military families moving into or out of school districts as a result of their parents’ deployment­s.

House Republican­s are also pushing another bill that would prohibit employers, either public or private, from requiring employees to receive vaccinatio­ns. The measure before the GOPcontrol­led House Health Committee has attracted multiple opponents of COVID-19 vaccines but does not mention the coronaviru­s. Instead, it addresses mandatory requiremen­ts for all vaccines, such as for the flu.

Lawmakers adjourned for the summer without moving the bill out of committee. It’s opposed by every major business group in Ohio along with multiple medical, hospital and health care groups.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Dr. Andrew Thomas, Chief Medical Officer at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, speaks during a news conference in Columbus in 2016. Thomas said Wednesday, July 14, that nine of every 10central Ohioans being hospitaliz­ed for the coronaviru­s are partially vaccinated or unvaccinat­ed. Meanwhile, Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff, chief medical officer for the Ohio Department of Health, said coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n trends have led to the developmen­t of “two Ohios” just as the highly contagious delta variant spreads widely.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Dr. Andrew Thomas, Chief Medical Officer at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, speaks during a news conference in Columbus in 2016. Thomas said Wednesday, July 14, that nine of every 10central Ohioans being hospitaliz­ed for the coronaviru­s are partially vaccinated or unvaccinat­ed. Meanwhile, Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff, chief medical officer for the Ohio Department of Health, said coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n trends have led to the developmen­t of “two Ohios” just as the highly contagious delta variant spreads widely.

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