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States Reconsider Religious Exemptions for Vaccinations in Child Care

States Reconsider Religious Exemptions for Vaccinations in Child Care

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More than half the children who attend Munchkin Land Daycare near Billings, Montana, have special needs or compromised immune systems. The kids, who range in age from 4 months to 9 years, have conditions that include fetal alcohol syndrome, cystic fibrosis, and Down syndrome, according to owner Sheryl Hutzenbiler.

鈥淭hese families came to me knowing we could offer them a safe and healthy environment,鈥 Hutzenbiler said. Part of ensuring that healthy environment is having a strong vaccination policy, she said, especially for those who are immunocompromised or too young to receive the full slate of childhood vaccines.

So, when officials at Montana鈥檚 health department revived a proposal that would allow people to claim religious exemptions from immunization requirements at child care facilities, Hutzenbiler was both dismayed and relieved. Dismayed, because allowing more children to claim exemptions could compromise the community immunity levels necessary to defend against highly infectious diseases like measles and pertussis. Relieved, because as she scoured the proposed regulations, she found that her facility, which is licensed to care for up to 15 children, would be in a category of smaller providers that could choose whether to enroll unvaccinated kids.

鈥淚f it came down to where I had to, I had no choice, I would stop enrolling children today,鈥 Hutzenbiler said. 鈥淚n five years, I would be closed.鈥

Montana, , allows religious exemptions from immunization requirements for school-age children. If the state is successful in expanding its policy to child care facilities, it would become the second this year to add a religious exemption to its immunization requirements for younger kids. Mississippi for schools and child care centers in July following a court ruling that the state鈥檚 lack of a religious exemption violated the U.S. Constitution鈥檚 free exercise clause.

Until recently, the trend had been going the other way, with four states 鈥 California, New York, Connecticut, and Maine 鈥 removing religious exemption policies over the past decade. West Virginia has never had a religious exemption.

But religious exemptions, fueled by conservative backlash to covid-19 vaccinations, have become caught up in partisan politics, said , a University of California-Davis law professor who specializes in the law, history, and politics of reproduction, health care, and conservatism.

鈥淚t tends to be breaking down much more along red state-blue state lines, where progressive states are moving in the direction of mandating vaccines in more situations and conservative states are moving more in the direction of broadening exemptions,鈥 Ziegler said. 鈥淪o, as much as religious exemptions for vaccines are not a new issue, they鈥檝e become polarized in a new way.鈥

The proposal in Montana the state Department of Public Health and Human Services floated last year, which a legislative committee temporarily blocked after public health advocates and child care providers objected. Afterward, in October 2022, health department officials said they would not enforce a religious exemption ban in child care centers.

鈥淲e are committed to ensuring that these families have viable child care options in accordance with state and federal law,鈥 department spokesperson Jon Ebelt at the time.

However, in the state鈥檚 latest proposal, 45 pages into of child care licensure rules, the health department seeks to extend that exemption to child care facilities, where a family now can claim a vaccine exemption only for medical reasons. (There is an existing religious exemption for the vaccine against .)

蘑菇影院 Health News sent the health department a list of questions about its decision to include a religious exemption in the rules proposal. Ebelt emailed a statement that did not address the exemption at all.

鈥淭he rules package cuts red tape to increase access to child care for hardworking Montana families, and ensures that related regulations align with statutory changes directed by the Legislature in 2021 and 2023,鈥 his statement said.

The prohibits the state from infringing on a person鈥檚 right to the exercise of religion. Another based on vaccination status.

A religious exemption under Montana鈥檚 proposed rules would require a child鈥檚 parent or guardian to submit a form attesting that vaccination is contrary to their religious belief, observance, or practice. With no mechanism to check the validity of such claims, health professionals worry exemptions would spike, reducing community immunity levels.

鈥淓xemptions lead to less people being vaccinated, which can lead to more outbreaks and more sick kids,鈥 said Marian Kummer, a retired pediatrician who practiced in Billings for 36 years.

The risk of disease outbreaks would increase not only in those child care centers but in communities as well, said , an associate professor at the University of Montana School of Public and Community Health Sciences.

A community is from measles, for example, if 95% of the population is vaccinated against it, according to the World Health Organization. Montana鈥檚 vaccine exemption rate among kindergartners was 3.5% in the 2020-21 school year, according to , putting it within that range of protection.

The health department鈥檚 proposed changes also would eliminate a requirement that child care facilities keep out infected and unvaccinated children and staffers when someone becomes sick with a vaccine-preventable disease, said Kiely Lammers, director of the nonprofit advocacy group .

Some have questioned the legitimacy of religious exemptions. Most religions, including a majority of Christian denominations, have no theological objection to vaccination, according to a in the journal Vaccine. And the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled limits do exist on religious and parental rights: 鈥淭he 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,鈥 says the 1944 ruling in .

The American Academy of Pediatrics has called for the elimination of all nonmedical exemptions, including both religious exemptions and personal-belief exemptions, 鈥渁s inappropriate for individual, public health, and ethical reasons,鈥 according to .

In Connecticut, plaintiffs who challenged the state鈥檚 decision to remove religious exemptions said they objected to the use of fetal or animal cell lines in the research and development of vaccines. But a three-judge panel for the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that religious exemptions do not serve 鈥渢o protect the health and safety of Connecticut students and the broader public鈥 when it upheld Connecticut鈥檚 decision.

Yet even in California, which , efforts are underway to overturn the law. In a , several parents backed by a conservative law firm are challenging the law鈥檚 constitutionality. One plaintiff, Sarah Clark, said she believes vaccines run counter to her interpretation of the Bible 鈥渂ecause they are a foreign substance and are harmful to the body.鈥 Attorney General Rob Bonta鈥檚 office said Nov. 1 it hadn鈥檛 been served with the case yet but will review the complaint and respond as appropriate.

Montana鈥檚 proposed rule is scheduled for a public hearing Nov. 13. Some child care providers, like Hutzenbiler, expect it ultimately to take effect. She said she is already drafting language to submit to the state as required under the proposed rules, saying Munchkin Land Daycare will not accept unvaccinated children.

Lammers said state officials should be open to changes and give child care centers with 16 or more kids the same choice as smaller facilities not to enroll unvaccinated children.

鈥淚鈥檓 hoping at the very least we can make it equal in all settings,鈥 she said of the rule proposal.

Kummer, the retired pediatrician, said she hopes the proposal prompts enough opposition that the state removes the plans for the religious exemption. But she doubts that will happen, given the anti-vaccination sentiment of Montana policymakers.

鈥淚t鈥檚 going to take a tragedy in our state or somewhere else where people wake up to the fact that we need vaccinations,鈥 Kummer said.

California news editor Judy Lin contributed to this report.