Not long ago, Kansas showed strong bipartisan support for vaccines as a tool to support a robust public health system.
But for childhood vaccine requirements were passed by the state Senate in March and now face the House when the legislature reconvenes April 25.
They are among the more than introduced in statehouses nationwide since Jan. 1, according to data from the . Of those bills, specifically relate to childhood vaccine requirements in 25 states.
In Missouri, for example, legislators are considering exempting private school students from vaccine requirements. In Louisiana, a would prohibit vaccinations on school property and at school-sponsored events.
Fewer than 10% of the bills will likely gain any traction, but the volume of attempts to roll back vaccine requirements is alarming, said , director of advocacy and public policy at the , a vaccine education organization.
鈥淭hose are all chipping away at one of the end goals for anti-vaccine activists, which is completely doing away with school requirements,鈥 said Lakshmanan. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what people need to be paying very close attention to.鈥
All states require specific childhood vaccinations for illnesses such as polio, measles, and mumps, but exemptions vary. They all allow exemptions for people with medical concerns, 44 states allow religious exemptions, and 15 allow philosophical exemptions, from the National Conference of State Legislatures.
Vaccinations are central to public health efforts at disease control and are foundational to the country鈥檚 social and economic system, said , CEO of the , a public health advocacy organization.
鈥淧oliticians are poking holes in our public safety net,鈥 Castrucci said of the onslaught of anti-vaccine legislation. 鈥淰accines, in and of themselves, are not medicine. It鈥檚 all of us collectively protecting each other.鈥
To be sure, anti-vaccine activists have existed as long as vaccines. And legislation to limit requirements to vaccinate against diseases such as polio, measles, and meningitis are not new. But, according to public health experts, the movement has gained momentum amid the coronavirus pandemic, boosting the reach of high-profile anti-vaccine activists.
鈥淚f you had told me that a pandemic 鈥 and what I would consider a miraculous vaccine for that disease 鈥 would trigger an anti-vax surge, I would never have believed it,鈥 said , executive director of , which works to improve children鈥檚 and family health in the Kansas City area of Missouri and Kansas. 鈥淏ut that鈥檚 exactly what happened.鈥
One would mandate that vaccine exemption requests be accepted without scrutiny if based on religion or personal beliefs. Currently, the state leaves it to day care centers and school districts to accept requests for religious exemptions.
State Sen. stands behind nullifying Kansas鈥 childhood vaccine requirements. The Republican, who said he is 鈥渘ot an anti-vaxxer in any shape or form,鈥 lamented mandates he said were a vestige of a 鈥渒inder, gentler time鈥 and suggested that individual rights supersede mandates designed to protect public health.
Steffen, an anesthesiologist who said he is by the Kansas Board of Healing Arts for prescribing ivermectin to covid patients, said suggestions that a resurgence of vaccine-preventable diseases could occur if vaccination rates fall amount to fearmongering by people paid off by the pharmaceutical industry.
But , a Kansas vaccine advocate who launched a to organize pro-vaccine Kansans, called such assertions insulting and said he doesn鈥檛 take any money from drug companies. He contracted meningitis B in 2004 before vaccines against it were available. He was in a coma for three weeks and had parts of all four limbs amputated.
鈥淔or me, this has been part of what helped me move on from that trauma,鈥 Marso said. 鈥淚 have a story that people need to know about.鈥
The legislative efforts to nullify the requirements fly in the face of widespread public support for vaccines and vaccine mandates, nationally and in Kansas, said Russell. More than 9 in 10 Kansas voters believe wellness vaccines are safe and support vaccine requirements, according to conducted this year for Nurture KC. Kansas voters overwhelmingly support religious exemptions, but a majority say they support tightening existing exemptions, according to the survey.
Before the pandemic, outbreaks of measles in , , Washington, and , as well as outbreaks of , had reinforced the idea that preventing disease spread required consistently high vaccination rates. And mandates, in part, helped create the mechanism for public health authorities to make vaccines widely available and accessible, said , spokesperson for , an advocacy organization.
鈥淟ost in what has become a political conversation around requirements is the danger of these vaccine-preventable diseases,鈥 said DeWald. 鈥淎ll it takes is one case.鈥
Previously, anti-vaccine activists relied on long-since-debunked narratives that vaccines cause autism, said , the research manager of the , which studies cyber policies and how people use the internet. But in the years leading up to the pandemic, the movement began to shift its focus to align more with the populist ideology of 鈥渋ndividual freedoms鈥 put forward by Second Amendment advocates and the tea party.
Donald Trump expressed vaccine skepticism long before becoming president. But it was when the then-president was said naming Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a well-known anti-vaccine activist, to 鈥渋nvestigate鈥 vaccine safety that the movement found its footing, said , assistant professor in the health policy and management department at Texas A&M University. The embrace of anti-vaccine messaging by prominent politicians 鈥 whether because they are 鈥渢rue believers鈥 or just see it as political necessity 鈥 has 鈥渓ent legitimacy that the movement lacked before,鈥 Callaghan added.
The similarity of bills from state to state raises red flags to vaccine advocates because it suggests that a coordinated effort to dismantle vaccine requirements and public health infrastructure is underway.
鈥淏ecause the anti-vax movement is becoming aligned with the far right, I think those information-sharing channels are becoming more sophisticated,鈥 said , executive director of the , a pro-vaccine organization. 鈥淭heir ability to attract far-right politicians who see vaccines as a cause has grown. That gets them attention, if not votes.鈥
Not all Republicans find common cause with anti-vaccine activists, said Kansas state Rep. , a Republican and family physician. He said he voted against some covid-related restrictions, like a statewide mask mandate, because he believed doing so might help defuse pandemic tensions. But he advocates for all vaccines, including covid shots.
Enough others in the Kansas legislature agreed in the case of one bill: Language targeting vaccines, under the auspices of parental rights, was ultimately removed before it was passed. Some observers are cautiously optimistic the House won鈥檛 pass the other bills as written.
While Eplee hopes the 鈥減assions鈥 inflamed by covid die down with distance from the early days of the pandemic, he鈥檚 concerned that voters have forgotten the damage done by vaccine-controllable diseases, making them susceptible to disinformation from determined anti-vaccine activists and the politicians among their ranks.
鈥淚 hate to see human nature play out like that,鈥 said Eplee. 鈥淏ut if people are vocal enough and loud enough, they can swing enough votes to change the world in a not-so-good way for public health and vaccinations.鈥
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