Bill Text: WV HB2783 | 2022 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Permitting a licensed physician to grant a medical exemption from the required immunizations for a child to enter a school or a state-regulated child care center
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 8-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2022-01-12 - To House Health and Human Resources [HB2783 Detail]
Download: West_Virginia-2022-HB2783-Introduced.html
WEST virginia legislature
2021 regular session
Introduced
House Bill 2783
By Delegates Steele, Foster, J. Jeffries, McGeehan, Gearhart, Jennings, Sypolt, and Kimble
[Introduced February 26, 2021; Referred to the Committee on Health and Human Resources then Education]
A BILL to amend and reenact §16-3-4 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, relating to permitting a licensed physician to grant a medical exemption from the required immunizations for a child to enter a school or a state-regulated child care center; removing the Commissioner of the Bureau for Public Health from the responsibility of granting immunization certificates and medical exemptions from immunization; providing for written statements of medical exemption; and providing for the statewide acceptance of the medical exemption.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
ARTICLE 3. PREVENTION AND CONTROL OF COMMUNICABLE AND OTHER INFECTIOUS DISEASES.
§16-3-4. Compulsory immunization of school children; information disseminated; offenses; penalties.
(a) “Medical exemption” means a statement by a licensed physician that immunization for a child is contraindicated or there exists a specific precaution to a particular vaccine.
(b) “Physician” means a doctor of allopathic or osteopathic medicine who has examined the child and who is properly licensed and in good standing in any state in the United States.
(a) (c) Whenever a resident birth occurs, the
commissioner shall promptly provide parents of the newborn child with
information on immunizations mandated by this state or required for admission
to a public, private and parochial school in this state or a state-regulated
child care center. The commissioner shall also promptly provide information
to parents of the newborn child about the process for obtaining a medical
exemption.
(b) (d) Except as hereinafter provided, a child
entering school or a state-regulated child care center in this state must be
immunized against chickenpox, hepatitis-b, measles, meningitis, mumps,
diphtheria, polio, rubella, tetanus and whooping cough.
(c) (e) No child or person may be admitted or
received in any of the schools of the state or a state-regulated child care
center until he or she has been immunized against chickenpox, hepatitis-b,
measles, meningitis, mumps, diphtheria, polio, rubella, tetanus and whooping
cough or produces a certificate from the commissioner medical
exemption statement granting the child or person an a medical
exemption from the compulsory immunization requirements of this section.
(d) Any school or
state-regulated child care center personnel having information concerning any
person who attempts to be enrolled in a school or state-regulated child care
center without having been immunized against chickenpox, hepatitis-b, measles,
meningitis, mumps, diphtheria, polio, rubella, tetanus and whooping cough shall
report the names of all such persons to the commissioner
(e) (f) Persons A person may be
provisionally enrolled under minimum criteria established by the commissioner
so that the person's immunization may be completed while missing a minimum
amount of school. No person shall be allowed to enter school without at least
one dose of each required vaccine measles, meningitis, mumps,
diphtheria, polio, rubella, tetanus and whooping cough vaccines with the
exception of those who have a statement of medical exemption from their
physician..
(f) (g) County health departments shall furnish
the biologicals for this immunization for children of parents or guardians who
attest that they cannot afford or otherwise access vaccines elsewhere.
(g) (h) Health officers and physicians who provide
vaccinations must present the person vaccinated with a certificate statement
of vaccination free of charge showing that they have been immunized against
chickenpox, hepatitis-b, measles, meningitis, mumps, diphtheria, polio,
rubella, tetanus and whooping cough, or he or she may give the certificate
statement to any person or child whom he or she knows to have been
immunized against chickenpox, hepatitis-b, measles, meningitis, mumps,
diphtheria, polio, rubella, tetanus and whooping cough.
(h) (i) The commissioner is authorized to A
physician may grant, or renew, condition, deny, suspend or revoke
medical exemptions to the compulsory immunization requirements of this
section, on a statewide basis, upon sufficient medical evidence that
immunization is contraindicated or there exists a specific precaution to a
particular vaccine. The physician shall provide the parent or guardian of
the child with a statement of medical exemption stating that a medical
exemption has been granted. A parent or guardian shall submit the statement to
the school or state licensed child care facility. The exemption is valid
throughout the state. Upon receipt of the statement, the school or
state-regulated child care center shall permit the child to enter.
(1) A request for an
exemption to the compulsory immunization requirements of this section must be
accompanied by the certification of a licensed physician stating that the
physical condition of the child is such that immunization is contraindicated or
there exists a specific precaution to a particular vaccine.
(2) The commissioner is
authorized to appoint and employ an Immunization Officer to make determinations
on request for an exemption to the compulsory immunization requirements of this
section, on a statewide basis, and delegate to the Immunization Officer the
authority granted to the commissioner by this subsection.
(3) A person appointed
and employed as the Immunization Officer must be a physician licensed under the
laws of this state to practice medicine.
(4) The Immunization
Officer's decision on a request for an exemption to the compulsory immunization
requirements of this section may be appealed to the State Health Officer.
(5) The final
determination of the State Health Officer is subject to a right of appeal
pursuant to the provisions of article five, chapter twenty-nine a of this code.
(i) A physician who
provides any person with a false certificate of immunization against
chickenpox, hepatitis-b, measles, meningitis, mumps, diphtheria, polio,
rubella, tetanus and whooping cough is guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon
conviction, shall be fined not less than $25 nor more than $100
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to permit a physician, as 46 other states allow, to grant a child a medical exemption from the required immunizations for entering a school or a state-regulated child care center. The position of Immunization Officer is eliminated.
Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from a heading or the present law and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.