Refusal of parents to vaccinate: dereliction
of duty or legitimate personal choice?
Peter B McIntyre, Alison H Williams and
Julie E
Leask
MJA2003
178(4):
150-151
Despite the risks to unvaccinated children, compulsory
vaccination is not the answer
In a pluralistic society, there
are many views on what constitutes acceptable child-rearing. In Australia
and other Western societies, parental discretion is limited primarily by
legislation against abuse or neglect. In treatment decisions, the legal
starting point is that the united view of both parents is correct in
identifying the child's welfare. A court will usually only override the
parents' decision if the judge is convinced the child's life is endangered,
such as when a child needs transfusion.2
Administration of a vaccine is never immediately life-saving in this sense,
except in the case of post-exposure rabies vaccine,3
but vaccination satisfies ethical criteria for preventive interventions in
children: it is effective, minimally invasive, and associated with
significant societal benefits.3
Indeed, the highly favourable benefit-to-risk ratio of childhood vaccination
is so well documented that healthcare professionals are understandably
frustrated when faced with what seems to be an irrational decision by
parents to refuse vaccination. This is especially so when this decision has
resulted in failure to prevent a life-threatening illness, as in the tetanus
case presented by Goldwater et al (page
175).4
This case raises issues for both the clinician and society. How do
healthcare professionals understand and best respond to a conscious decision
not to vaccinate? In a highly immunised population, what is the balance of
risks and benefits to individual children and their contacts from refusal to
vaccinate? Should a case such as this propel us towards compulsory
vaccination?
In Australia, vaccination is not compulsory, but various
incentives and reminders aim to promote it. First, payment of the maternity
allowance at 18 months and the childcare benefit requires up-to-date
vaccination according to the Australian Childhood Immunisation Register (ACIR),5
unless a medical practitioner has notified the ACIR of a contraindication or
serologically confirmed immunity, or has discussed conscientious objection
with a parent. Second, at school entry, documentation of full vaccination is
required in most Australian jurisdictions, with children who do not have
such documentation or serological proof of immunity to specific diseases,
such as measles, able to be excluded from school attendance if suspected
cases occur. Although the United States is often quoted as having laws for
mandatory vaccination, the practical effect of these laws is also limited to
exclusion of unvaccinated children from school during outbreaks, although
preschool attendance for such children can be barred altogether.6
Italy is one of a few countries where there is compulsory vaccination, but
only for diphtheria, tetanus, polio and hepatitis B. However, this has not
been enforced for many years.7
To find examples of truly compulsory vaccination, it is necessary to go back
to the 19th century. In England, the Vaccination Actof 1853 made smallpox vaccination compulsory for all infants in the
first three months of life, on pain of fine or imprisonment. Its enactment
spawned riots in several towns and an active anti-vaccination movement. In
1898, a new Vaccination Actremoved these
penalties and introduced the concept of "conscientious objector" into
English law.8
In present-day Australia, most parents whose children are not
fully vaccinated are not conscientious objectors, but rather face practical
barriers such as recurrent minor illness, work commitments, large family
size or social disadvantage.9,10
Parents who are strongly opposed to vaccination comprise a much smaller
group. Of a large sample of 1779 Melbourne children in childcare in 1997,
only 13 (0.7%) had not received any vaccines.10
This is similar to the proportion of all children Australia-wide registered
with Medicare for whom there is a registered conscientious objection.5
In general, such parents tend to be well educated, older, female and of
Anglo-Saxon background.11,12
Qualitative data suggest that conscientious objectors fear possible but
unknown, especially long term, adverse effects of vaccines, believe that
lifestyle measures to improve general immunity are viable alternatives to
protection from vaccines, and often mistrust the motives of healthcare
providers.9,12
This limits the ability of healthcare professionals to present pertinent
counterarguments. Indeed, there is some evidence that parents
philosophically opposed to vaccination may have their objections reinforced
by factual information about risks and benefits, because these facts do not
accord with their beliefs about health and illness.13
In contrast, parents who are merely doubtful about vaccination are much more
likely to be amenable to presentation of relevant factual information.9
Healthcare professionals communicating with such doubtful parents need to
have their facts well prepared and be sure that they have ascertained the
parents' specific concerns, particularly whether these arise from personal
or family experience. This is all potentially achievable within a realistic
timeframe for a standard consultation, using readily available material
specific to Australia.14
In the current Australian environment of high immunisation
rates, does refusal of vaccination pose risks to either the individual or
the community? In the case of tetanus, the risk is limited to the
individual, as the disease is not transmissible. The risk to the individual
is highlighted by the US experience, where, with very high immunisation
rates, 15 reported cases of childhood tetanus occurred between 1992 and
2000.15
Children unvaccinated because of their parents' beliefs accounted for 9/11
cases in school-aged children,15
although objecting families represent only 0.6% of families with children
attending school in the US.16For other transmissible vaccine-preventable diseases, such as
measles, pertussis and poliomyelitis, the risk goes beyond the individual.
In Colorado, schools with a higher percentage of objectors were more likely
to have a pertussis outbreak, and at least 11% of vaccinated children in
measles outbreaks acquired measles from contact with an unvaccinated child
of objecting parents. In addition, there was a 22-fold (measles) and sixfold
(pertussis) increased risk for the individual unvaccinated child.16
Similarly, in Germany, almost all cases of Hib meningitis occur in
unvaccinated children of objecting parents.17
In closed communities of vaccination objectors, such as certain religious
groups, very high levels of morbidity from diseases not present in the
general community can occur, such as in polio outbreaks in the Netherlands.18
Although there are few such communities in Australia, there is a tendency
for conscientious objectors to cluster in certain geographic areas, so the
risk of transmission is amplified. Measles cases in Australia now arise
exclusively from imported strains and the unvaccinated children of
conscientious objectors have recently been highlighted as at risk.19
Parents should be made aware that a decision not to vaccinate,
made on their children's behalf, exposes their child to significant risks,
even in 2003. Persuasion, at both the clinical level14
and the societal level,5
is appropriate, but truly compulsory vaccination is not an option, either in
Australia or in other comparable countries.6,7
Oates L. The courts' role in decisions about medical
treatment. BMJ 2000; 321: 1282-1284.
<PubMed>
Bradley P. Should childhood immunisation be compulsory?
J Med Ethics 1999; 25: 330-334.
<PubMed>
Hodges FM, Svoboda JS, Van Howe RS. Prophylactic
interventions on children: balancing human rights with public health.
J Med Ethics 2002; 28: 10-16.
<PubMed>
Goldwater PN, Braunack-Mayer AJ, Power RG, et al.
Childhood tetanus in Australia: ethical issues for a should-be-forgotten
preventable disease. Med J Aust 2003; 178:
175-177.
<eMJA full text>
Hull B, Lawrence G, MacIntyre CR, McIntyre P. Immunisation
coverage: Australia 2001. Canberra: Commonwealth Department of Health and
Ageing, 2002. Available at
http://www.health.gov.au/pubhlth/immunise/report.pdf.
Orenstein WA, Hinman AR. The immunization system in the
United States the role of school immunization laws.
Vaccine 1999; 17: S19-S24.
Bonanni P, Bergamini M. Factors influencing vaccine uptake
in Italy. Vaccine 2002; 20: S8-S12.
Wolfe RM, Sharp LK. Anti-vaccinationists past and present.
BMJ 2002; 325: 430-432.
<PubMed>
Bond L, Nolan T, Pattison P, Carlin J. Vaccine preventable
diseases and immunisations: a qualitative study of mothers' perceptions of
severity, susceptibility, benefits and barriers. Aust
N Z J Public Health 1998; 22: 441-446.
<PubMed>
Bond L, Nolan T, Lester R. Immunisation uptake, services
required and government incentives for users of formal day care.
Aust N Z J Public Health 1999; 23: 368-376.
<PubMed>
Gellin BG, Maibach EW, Marcuse EK. Do parents understand
immunizations? A national telephone survey.
Pediatrics 2000; 106: 1097-1102.
<PubMed>
Roden J. Childhood immunisation levels in Sydney's Western
Metropolitan Region: parental attitudes and nurses' roles.
Aust J Adv Nurs 1992; 9: 18-24.
<PubMed>
Meszaros JR, Asch DA, Baron J, et al. Cognitive processes
and the decisions of some parents to forego pertussis vaccination for
their children. J Clin Epidemiol 1996; 49:
697-703.
<PubMed>
MacIntyre CR, Gidding H, editors. Immunisation myths and
realities: responding to arguments against immunisation. 3rd ed. Canberra:
Commonwealth Department of Health and Aged Care, 2001. Available at
http://immunise.health.gov.au/myths_2.pdf.
Fair E, Murphy T, Golaz A, Wharton M. Philosophic
objection to vaccination as a risk for tetanus among children younger than
15 years. Pediatrics 2002; 109: E2.
<PubMed>
Feiken DR, Lezotte DC, Hamman RF, et al. Individual and
community risks of measles and pertussis associated with personal
exemptions to immunization. JAMA 2000; 284:
3145-3150.
<PubMed>
Oostvogel PM, van Wijngaarden JK, van der Avoort HG, et
al. Poliomyelitis outbreak in an unvaccinated community in The
Netherlands, 19923. Lancet 1994; 344:
630-631.
<PubMed>
Hanna JN, Symons DJ, Lyon MJ. A measles outbreak in the
Whitsundays, Queensland: the shape of things to come?
Commun Dis Intell 2002; 26: 589-592.
(Received 6 Nov 2002, accepted 14 Feb
2002)
National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance of
Vaccine-Preventable Diseases, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Westmead,
NSW.
Peter B McIntyre, FRACP, FAFPHM,
Deputy Director; Alison H
Williams, MB BS, FRACGP,
Research Fellow; Julie E
Leask, RM, MPH,
Senior Research Officer.
Correspondence: Clinical Associate Professor P B McIntyre,
National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance of
Vaccine-Preventable Diseases, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Locked Bag
4001, Westmead, NSW 2145. petermATchw.edu.au
AntiSpam note: To avoid attracting spam mail robots, authors' email
addresses on the MJA website are written with AT in place of the usual symbol,
and we have removed "mail to" links. Replace AT with the correct symbol to get
a valid address. We regret the inconvenience this entails. Lobby your
government for more effective antispam regulations.
ALL INFORMATION, DATA, AND
MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR GENERAL INFORMATION
PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS
OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR
LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND
COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH
YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"