The measles outbreak makes it vital for New York lawmakers to end religious exemptions for vaccinations.
It’s no coincidence that measles is spreading across the United States after a decade in which the number of parents claiming exemption for their children from vaccination has grown.
The outbreak has been most intense in New York, particularly in deeply
insular ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities in Brooklyn and upstate that
have been vulnerable to misinformation and resistant to vaccination.
To halt the spread of the disease, bills in the State Senate and Assembly
would prevent parents from claiming that their religious beliefs exempt
them from legal requirements that their children be vaccinated before
going to school. The American Academy of Pediatrics has made the elimination of such nonmedical exemptions its top priority this year.
The
legislation would allow exemptions only if a licensed doctor certified
that the immunization was detrimental to the child’s health, as is the
case in current law.
Action on these sensible bills has stalled, however, just weeks before legislators leave for the summer — even as the latest cases of the highly contagious and sometimes fatal disease were diagnosed in New York last week.
While bills in both chambers are in committee, opposition to the legislation is centered on the Assembly, where a bill before the Health Committee has not received a vote and the committee
chairman, Richard Gottfried, said it would not until a majority in the
Assembly supported it. More disturbingly, Mr. Gottfried said he and
other committee members thought
the legislation could violate the First Amendment, echoing one of the
anti-vaccine movement’s favored talking points — that beliefs about
vaccines are protected by the Constitution. Mr. Gottfried said he was
still wrestling with where he stood on the issue.
And while Gov. Andrew Cuomo says he opposes religious exemptions for vaccines, last month he hedged that stance, also expressing concern for First Amendment protections.
Religious
freedom is important to protect, but the courts have ruled it doesn’t
apply here. In upholding a California law that removed religious
exemptions, a federal appeals court last year noted an earlier ruling that, “The right to practice
religion freely does not include liberty to expose the community or the
child to communicable disease or the latter to ill health or death.”
Mr.
Gottfried said he was uneasy anyway. “There are probably several issues
where views on the Constitution and constitutional values may differ
from what the Supreme Court majority thinks,” he said.
It’s not clear what these concerns are even based on. Faith leaders themselves have acknowledged that the grounds for religious opposition to vaccines are shaky, at best. The Orthodox Union and the Rabbinical Council of America have organized a public health campaign to get parents to vaccinate their children.
Legal
mandates are one of the best ways to accomplish that goal. They
increase the likelihood that vaccine-wary parents will consult
legitimate medical professionals who have the capacity to allay their
fears. They provide a crucial counter to the factually vacuous
anti-vaccine campaign, which is being waged not only on social media
platforms like Facebook, but also in statehouses across the country.
And, as recent experience shows, they work: When legislators in California and Michigan strengthened their mandates, vaccination rates in those states went up.
New York City has declared a public health emergency around the measles outbreaks in Brooklyn and Queens, even closing several yeshivas
— and threatening to close others — that did not comply with mandatory
vaccination orders. But children throughout New York State remain
vulnerable. State Senator Brad Hoylman, a lead sponsor of the
legislation to end the religious exemption, said in a phone interview on
Tuesday that he didn’t want to wait for tragedy to act.
Mr.
Hoylman is right, and New York’s leaders must not let this legislation
continue to languish. The bill could go further — as currently written,
it wouldn’t impose any penalties, for instance, on parents who violate
the law and send their children to school unvaccinated. Yet, in a state
with an urgent public health crisis, this is the best place to begin.
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