In Northern California, the pastor of a megachurch hands out forms to the faithful. A New Mexico state senator will âhelp you articulate a religious exemptionâ by pointing to the decades-old use of aborted fetal cells in the development of some vaccines. And a offers exemption letters â for a suggested âdonationâ starting at $25.
With workplace vaccine mandates in the offing, opponents are turning to a tried-and-true recourse for avoiding a covid-19 shot: the claim that vaccination interferes with religious beliefs.
No major denomination opposes vaccination. Even the Christian Science Church, whose adherents rely largely on prayer rather than medicine, an official policy. It counsels ârespect for public health authorities and conscientious obedience to the laws of the land, including those requiring vaccination.â
And if a person claims their privately held religious beliefs forbid vaccination, that defense is unlikely to hold up in court if challenged, legal experts say. Although individual clergy members have mounted the anti-vaccine bandwagon, they have no obvious justification in religious texts for their positions. Many seem willing to cater to people who reject vaccination for another reason.
Still, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) grants to what constitutes a sincerely held religious belief. As a result, some experts predict most employers and administrators wonât want to challenge such objections from their employees.
âI have a feeling that not a lot of people are going to want to fight on this topic,â said Dr. John Swartzberg, an expert on infectious diseases and professor at the University of California-Berkeley.
The Food and Drug Administrationâs of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine on Aug. 23 could bring the matter to a head. Many government agencies, health care providers, colleges and the military had been awaiting the move before enforcing mandates.
California, which for childhood vaccination in 2015, has led the way on covid vaccine mandates. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsomâs July 26 for state employees and health care workers to be fully vaccinated or submit to weekly testing was the first of its kind, as was a similar declaration Aug. 11 for all teachers and staff at both public and private schools. The 23-campus California State University system joined UC in requiring vaccination of all students and staff, and companies like Google, Facebook and Twitter have announced mandatory proof of employee vaccination for those who return to their offices.
The University of California is requiring proof of vaccination for all staffers and students across its 10 campuses, a decision that potentially affects . But like many other businesses, it for those who wish to request an exemption âon medical, disability or religious grounds,â adding that it is required by law to do so.
Nothing in history suggests that a large number of students or staff members will seek such an out â but then, no previous vaccine conversation has been as overtly as the one around covid.
âThis country is going to mandates. It just is. Every other alternative has been tried,â said Dr. Monica Gandhi, an infectious diseases expert at UC-San Francisco. âThat phrase, âreligious exemption,â is very big. But itâs going to be quite hard in the current climate â in a mass health crisis, with a vaccine in place that works â to just let any such religious claims go.â
Indeed, while have long offered reluctant parents ways to exempt their kids from shots, these days churches, internet-based religious businesses and others seem to be offering covid vaccination exemptions wholesale.
Dr. Gregg Schmedes, a Republican state senator and otolaryngologist in New Mexico, used an Aug. 19 Facebook post to direct health care workers âwith a religious belief that abortion is immoralâ the use of cells from aborted fetuses to test or produce various covid vaccines. One U.S.-distributed vaccine, the Johnson & Johnson product, is made using a cell culture that partly originated in retinal cells from a fetus aborted in 1985.
Yet the Vatican has deemed it "morally acceptable" to get a covid vaccination. In fact, it âthe moral choice because it is about your life but also the lives of others.â In an increasing number of dioceses â Chicago, Philadelphia, Los Angeles and New York, among others â bishops have instructed priests and deacons not to sign any letter that lends the churchâs imprimatur to a request for religious exemption.
Schmedes did not respond to questions posed by KHN via email.
In the Sacramento-area city of Rocklin, meanwhile, a church that Newsomâs covid shutdown orders last year has handed out . Greg Fairrington, pastor of Destiny Christian Church, told attendees at a church service, âNobody should be able to mandate that you have to take a vaccine or you lose your job. Thatâs just not right, here in America.â
EEOC suggest that employers make a âreasonable accommodationâ to those with a sincerely held religious objection to a workplace rule. That might mean moving an unvaccinated employee to an isolated part of the office, or from a forward-facing position to one that involves less interpersonal contact. But the employer isnât required to do anything that results in an undue hardship or more than a âde minimisâ cost.
As for the objection itself, the commissionâs advice is vague. Employers âshould ordinarily assume that an employeeâs request for religious accommodation is based on a sincerely held religious belief,â the EEOC says. Employers have the right to ask for supporting documentation, but employeesâ religious beliefs donât have to hew to any specific or organized faith.
The distinction between religion and ideology is blurring among those seeking exemptions. In Turlock, California, a preschool teacher was provided an exemption letter by her pastor, who to those who felt taking a vaccine was âmorally compromising.â Asked by KHN via direct message why she sought the exemption, the woman said she didnât feel comfortable being vaccinated because of âwhatâs in the vaccine,â then added, âI personally am over âCovidâ and the control the government is trying to implement on us!â Like other exemption seekers, even those who have posted in Facebook anti-vaccine groups, she feared having other people know she sought an exemption.
A surgical technician working at Dignity Health, which has ordered its employees by Nov. 1, said she was awaiting a response from the companyâs human resources department on her request for a religious exemption. She freely explained her reasons for applying by referencing two Bible passages and listing vaccine ingredients she said are âharmful to the human body.â But she didnât want anyone to know she applied for the religious exemption.
A stateâs right to require vaccination has been settled law since a that upheld compulsory smallpox vaccination in Massachusetts. Legal experts say that right has been upheld repeatedly, including in a that religiously motivated actions arenât insulated from laws, unless a law singles out religion for disfavored treatment. In August, Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett declined, without comment, a challenge to rule that all students, staff and faculty be vaccinated.
âUnder current law it is clear that no religious exemption is required,â Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of UC-Berkeleyâs law school, told KHN. Clearly, that is not preventing people from seeking one.
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