A
new analysis published in the Journal of the American Medical
Association (JAMA) confirms what many parents, physicians, and
policymakers have witnessed over the past decade. Vaccine mandate
exemptions are steadily rising across the United States, with the
sharpest increase occurring after COVID-19 vaccine mandates were
implemented.
Researchers
analyzing county-level data from 45 states and the District of Columbia
reported that religious and conscientious/personal belief exemptions to
vaccination increased from 0.6 percent between 2010 and 2011 to 3.1
percent between 2023 and 2024, particularly among children entering
kindergarten. There was no change in medical vaccine exemptions, which
require a doctor to follow narrow vaccine contraindication guidelines
published by the U.S Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and the American
Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) when granting a medical exemption to
vaccination for a child.
This trend is not unexpected.
In response to the report, Barbara Loe Fisher, co-founder and president of the National Vaccine Information Center (NVIC), told The Epoch Times:
“The
findings were not surprising because officials have narrowed medical
exemptions over the years, so parents have only the conscientious and
religious exemptions available to protect their children from harm.”
She
also noted that the sharper increase in exemptions between 2021 and
2024 reflects the public’s response to COVID-19 vaccine side effects and
mandates.
“The
COVID-19 vaccine mandates created fear and distrust of aggressive
vaccination policies implemented by doctors and public health officials.”
The vaccine exemption analysis, published in a research letter in JAMA,
found that more than half of U.S. counties experienced an increase in
religious and conscientious/personal belief exemptions greater than one
percent between 2010 and 2024. States that eliminated religious and
conscientious/personal belief vaccine exemptions saw declines in
exemption rates, while medical exemptions remained largely unchanged
throughout the study period.
Professors Want Religious, Conscientious Belief Exemptions Eliminated
The
authors, who are professors at Columbia and Stanford Universities and
Baylor College of Medicine, warned that rising vaccine exemption rates
can contribute to increases in disease and called on states to
“reconsider” religious and conscientious/personal belief vaccine
exemption policies.
For
more than four decades, NVIC has emphasized that public trust is built
through respect for individual health differences and risk factors,
transparency about vaccine safety and effectiveness, as well as respect
for informed consent rights. When families feel their legitimate
concerns about vaccines are being dismissed by doctors and they are
bullied into vaccinating – which certainly happened during the COVID
pandemic response - many end up backing away from all vaccines. |
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