West Virginia Legislature
2016 Regular Session
Introduced
House Bill 2556
2015 Carryover
(By Delegates Cowles, Lane, Sobonya, Householder, Kessinger, Fast and Storch)
[Introduced January 13, 2016; referred to the
Committee on Health and Human Resources then the Judiciary.]
A BILL to amend and reenact §16‑3‑4 and §16‑3‑5 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, all relating generally to mandatory immunizations; setting forth immunization dosage levels; adding required immunizations; providing medical and religious exemptions from mandatory immunizations for school children; requiring parents and guardians to assert their beliefs in an affidavit; providing that the affidavit be provided before the exemption applies; allowing the removal of students who are not immunized from school in times of emergency or epidemic; granting legislative rulemaking authority to the Secretary for the Department of Health and Human Resources to add or delete diseases for which vaccines are required for school attendance, to develop necessary forms and to create a process for review any verification of affidavits for completeness; nullifying an interpretive rule and any action taken pursuant to the interpretive rule; modifying the Immunization Advisory Committee and establishing a chair of the committee.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That §16‑3‑4 and §16‑3‑5 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, be amended and reenacted, all to read as follows:
ARTICLE 3. PREVENTION AND CONTROL OF COMMUNICABLE AND OTHER INFECTIOUS DISEASES.
§16‑3‑4. Compulsory immunization of school children; required vaccinations; exemptions; health emergencies; appeals.
(a) When a resident birth occurs, the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Resources shall promptly provide parents of the newborn child with information on immunizations, including those mandated by this state for admission to a public, private or parochial school in this state.
(b) Except as provided in subsection (c) of this section, all children entering school in this state must be age appropriately immunized against chickenpox, hepatitis‑b, polio, measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus, whooping cough and any other disease requiring vaccination as established by legislative rule promulgated pursuant to the provisions of article three, chapter twenty‑nine‑a of this code by the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Resources. The legislative rule as required by this section shall set forth the dosage of the immunizations as follows:
(1) DTaP/DTP/Td/Tdap B shall require four doses;
(2) Polio (IPV) ‑ shall require three doses;
(3) Measles, Mumps and Rubella (MMR) ‑ shall require two doses the first of which must be done after the child=s first birthday;
(4) Hepatitis‑B ‑ (Recombivax HB or Engerix‑Brequire) shall require three injections administered over a six‑month period, and;
(5) Chickenpox (VAR) ‑ shall require two doses.
Provisional enrollment may occur following receipt of one dose of the vaccine and is allowed for a period of up to eight months until the required dosage is completed.
(c) Exemptions. B‑ A parent or guardian may apply for an exemption from the provisions of this section as follows:
(1) Medical exemption. ‑‑ A parent or guardian of a child entering the schools of this state may request a medical exemption from a required vaccination for his or her minor child. If the parent or guardian of the child or ward presents a certificate to the school signed by a physician who is duly registered and licensed to practice medicine in West Virginia or a contiguous state which sets forth the opinion and the basis of the opinion of the physician examining the child or ward that immunization of the child or ward is medically impossible or improper for any or all of the following diseases including chickenpox, hepatitis‑b, diphtheria, polio, rubeola, measles, tetanus, whooping cough and any other disease requiring vaccination as established by legislative rule as provided in subsection (b) of this section; or, because of another compelling medical reason immunization of the child or ward for any or all of the following diseases including chickenpox, hepatitis‑b, diphtheria, polio, measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus, whooping cough and any other disease requiring vaccination as established by legislative rule pursuant to subsection (b) of this section should not be required for public, private or parochial school attendance, the secretary shall grant the exemption. Additionally, a parent or guardian of a child entering the schools of this state for the first time may request a medical exemption from a required vaccination for his or her minor child, if immunity against chickenpox, hepatitis‑b, diphtheria, polio, measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus, whooping cough and any other disease requiring vaccination as established by legislative rule pursuant to subsection (b) of this section can be shown through laboratory testing.
(2) Religious exemption. ‑‑ A parent or guardian with a strongly held religious belief that his or her minor child or ward should not be subject to a required immunization as provided in this section, may seek an exemption from any or all required vaccinations for his or her minor child entering the schools of this state for the first time. To apply for the exemption the parent or guardian shall execute an affidavit stating their religious tenant against immunizations. The affidavit must then be signed by a physician licensed to practice in West Virginia pursuant to the provisions of article three, chapter thirty of this code or a physician licensed in a contiguous state and on a form set forth in an emergency rule promulgated by the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Resources pursuant to the provisions of section fifteen, article three, chapter twenty‑nine‑a of this code. The signature of the physician indicates that the parents have been given information regarding the benefits of vaccination and the risks associated with not vaccinating have been explained to the parent or guardian, face to face, and should include the date this education took place. The affidavit is required to include a list of required immunizations to allow a parent or guardian to request an exemption for his or her child from any or all of the required immunizations. In the affidavit, the parent or guardian shall state that their religious belief is in conflict with the child receiving the immunizations required by this section and shall indicate the specific vaccines for which an exemption is being requested.
(3) General requirement for exemptions. ‑‑ Documentation shall be submitted to the school where the child will attend. The school shall provide a copy of the required affidavit to the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Resources within fifteen calendar days of receiving the request for an exemption.
(4) Suspension. B‑ The Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Resources may temporarily suspend an exemption for a student who is not immunized and exclude the student from attending school during an outbreak or health emergency. The student may not return or be admitted to school until the outbreak or health emergency has been resolved and the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Resources or his or her designee approves the return or admittance to school.
(d) Health care providers who provide vaccinations in this state shall comply with vaccine adverse event reporting requirements as set forth in the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986, (42 U.S.C. §§300aa‑1 to 300aa‑34), which mandates that health care providers report health problems following vaccination, including hospitalizations, injuries and deaths, to the federal Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS).
(e) The Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Resources shall propose rules for legislative approval in accordance with the provisions of article three, chapter twenty‑nine‑a of this code, to implement the provisions of this section, to develop necessary forms, affidavits and certificates, to add or remove diseases requiring vaccination for school attendance, addressing the issue of school transfers and reporting requirements for each county related to the exemptions.
(f) The changes made to this section during the 2015 Regular Session of the Legislature supercede any interpretive rule and any action taken by the Department of Health and Human Resources in the promulgation of an interpretive rule regarding compulsory immunizations. That rule and any action take pursuant to it will be null and void with the submission of any emergency and legislative rule pursuant to the provisions of this section.
§16‑3‑5. Distribution of free vaccine preventives of disease.
(a) Declaration of legislative findings and purpose.
‑‑ The Legislature finds and declares that early immunization for
preventable diseases represents one of the most cost‑effective means of
disease prevention. The savings which can be realized from immunization,
compared to the cost of health care necessary to treat the illness and lost
productivity, are substantial. Immunization of children at an early age serves
as a preventative preventive measure both in time and money and
is essential to maintain our children's health and well‑being. The costs
of childhood immunizations should not be allowed to preclude the benefits
available from a comprehensive, medically supervised child immunization
service. Furthermore, the federal government has established goals that
require ninety percent of all children to be immunized by age two and provided
funding to allow uninsured children to meet this goal.
(b) The State Director Commissioner of the
Bureau for Public Health shall acquire vaccine for the prevention of polio,
measles, mumps, rubella, chickenpox, diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus,
hepatitis‑b, haemophilus influenzae‑b and other vaccine preventives
of disease preventable diseases as may be deemed considered
necessary or required by law, and shall distribute the same, free of charge, in
such quantities as he or she may deem considers
necessary, to county and municipal health officers public and private
providers, to be used by them for the benefit of and without expense to
the citizens within their respective jurisdictions, to check
contagions and control epidemics.
(c) The county and municipal health officers shall have
Commissioner of the Bureau for Public Health through the immunization
program, has the responsibility to properly store and distribute, free of
charge, vaccines to public and private medical or osteopathic
physicians within their jurisdictions providers to be utilized
used to check contagions and control epidemics: Provided,
That the public and private medical or osteopathic physicians shall
providers may not make a charge for the vaccine itself when
administering it to a patient. The county and municipal health officers
shall provide a receipt to the State Director of Health for Commissioner
of the Bureau for Public Health through the immunization program shall keep an
accurate record of any vaccine delivered as herein provided in
this section.
(d) The Director of the Division Health Secretary
of the Department of Health and Human Resources is charged with
establishing a childhood an Immunization Advisory Committee, whose
members do not have conflicts of interest with vaccine manufacturers, or who
could financially gain directly or indirectly from vaccine mandates. The
advisory committee is to plan for universal access, make recommendations on
the distribution of vaccines acquired pursuant to this section, advise the
secretary on the changing needs and opportunities for immunization from known
diseases for all persons across their life span and tracking of track
immunization compliance in accordance with federal and state laws. The
childhood Members of the Immunization Advisory Committee shall be designated
and appointed by the Secretary of the Department of the Health and Human
Resources no later than the first day of July, one thousand nine hundred
ninety‑four and July 1,2015. The Advisory Committee shall be
comprised of representatives from the following groups: Public health
nursing, public health officers, primary health care providers, pediatricians,
family practice physicians, health care administrators, state Medicaid
program the Commissioner of the Bureau for Medical Services, or his or
her designee, the health insurance industry, the Director of the
Public Employees Insurance Agency, or his or her designee, the self‑insured
industry and a minimum of three consumers. The state epidemiologist shall
serve serves as an advisor to the committee. The Commissioner of
the Bureau for Public Health, or his or her designee, serves as the Chair of
the Advisory Committee. Members of the advisory committee shall
serve two‑year four‑year terms.
(e) All health insurance policies and prepaid care
policies issued in this state which provide coverage for the children of the
insured shall provide coverage for child immunization services to include the
cost of the vaccine, if incurred by the health care provider, and all costs of
administration from birth through age sixteen years. These services shall
be are exempt from any deductible, per‑visit charge and/or
copayment provisions which may be in force in these policies or contracts.
This section does not exempt other health care services provided at the time of
immunization from any deductible and/ or copayment provisions.
(f) Attending physicians, midwives, nurse practitioners, hospitals, birthing centers, clinics and other appropriate health care providers shall provide parents of newborns and preschool age children with information on the following immunizations: Diphtheria, polio, mumps, measles, rubella, tetanus, hepatitis‑b, hemophilus influenzae‑b, chickenpox and whooping cough and other diseases requiring vaccination as established by legislative rule pursuant to the provision of subsection (b) of section four of this article. This information should include the availability of free immunization services for children.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to provide medical and religious exemptions from mandatory immunizations for school children. The bill would require parents and guardians to assert their religious beliefs in an affidavit. Parents or guardians seeking an exemption for a child would be required to present an affidavit to be provided to the Department of Health and Human Resources, before the exemption could apply. Further, the bill would remove students who are not immunized from school in times of emergency or epidemics. The bill provides that the Secretary of Health and Human Resources may by legislative rule add or delete diseases for which vaccines are required for school attendance and reconstitutes the Immunization Advisory Committee.
Strike‑throughs indicate language that would be stricken from the present law, and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.
§16‑3‑4 has been completely rewritten; therefore, it has been completely underscored.