March 29, 2011
Parent wants immunization case heard by U.S. Supreme Court
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RICHMOND, Va. -- A lawyer for a West Virginia woman who unsuccessfully challenged the state's child immunization law said Tuesday she will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to review the case.

"We're going to push this appeal as far as we can," said Patricia Finn, who represents Jennifer Workman in a lawsuit against state and Mingo County health and education officials.

Workman claims the state's immunization mandate for all public school children conflicts with her religious belief that a child must not be injected with any potentially harmful substance. Her first child developed autism around the time she was immunized, and Workman feared the same would happen to her younger child.

She sued after Lenore Pre-K to 8 School in Mingo County refused to admit her daughter without the vaccinations against childhood diseases. U.S. District Judge Joseph R. Goodwin dismissed the lawsuit last year, saying there is little evidence that standard vaccinations are not safe.

Finn said she was disappointed that a three-judge panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last week unanimously affirmed Goodwin's decision. The panel said in its ruling that the Supreme Court has consistently held that states can require the vaccinations without providing any religious exemption.

"Although we respect the court's opinion, it's very, very troubling," Finn said.

She said the court did not require any proof that immunizations are effective. But even if they are, she said, "to make someone do it when they have religious objections is outrageous."

Joanna Tabit of Charleston, a lawyer for the Mingo County schools, said she was pleased with the appeals court's ruling.

"We're on the forefront of these public health issues," she said. "These statutes are designed to protect the public health and welfare while respecting individual rights."

The West Virginia law allows an exemption if a parent presents a certificate from a reputable physician showing immunization "is impossible or improper or other sufficient reason why such immunizations have not been done." Workman submitted such a certificate from a child psychiatrist, but school and state health officials rejected it.

Workman still lives in West Virginia but sends her daughter to school in Kentucky, which allows a religious exemption for immunizations.

 

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Parent wants immunization case heard by U.S. Supreme Court

RICHMOND, Va. -- A lawyer for a West Virginia woman who unsuccessfully challenged the state's child immunization law said Tuesday she will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to review the case.

"We're going to push this appeal as far as we can," said Patricia Finn, who represents Jennifer Workman in a lawsuit against state and Mingo County health and education officials.

Workman claims the state's immunization mandate for all public school children conflicts with her religious belief that a child must not be injected with any potentially harmful substance. Her first child developed autism around the time she was immunized, and Workman feared the same would happen to her younger child.

She sued after Lenore Pre-K to 8 School in Mingo County refused to admit her daughter without the vaccinations against childhood diseases. U.S. District Judge Joseph R. Goodwin dismissed the lawsuit last year, saying there is little evidence that standard vaccinations are not safe.

Finn said she was disappointed that a three-judge panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last week unanimously affirmed Goodwin's decision. The panel said in its ruling that the Supreme Court has consistently held that states can require the vaccinations without providing any religious exemption.

"Although we respect the court's opinion, it's very, very troubling," Finn said.

She said the court did not require any proof that immunizations are effective. But even if they are, she said, "to make someone do it when they have religious objections is outrageous."

Joanna Tabit of Charleston, a lawyer for the Mingo County schools, said she was pleased with the appeals court's ruling.

"We're on the forefront of these public health issues," she said. "These statutes are designed to protect the public health and welfare while respecting individual rights."

The West Virginia law allows an exemption if a parent presents a certificate from a reputable physician showing immunization "is impossible or improper or other sufficient reason why such immunizations have not been done." Workman submitted such a certificate from a child psychiatrist, but school and state health officials rejected it.

Workman still lives in West Virginia but sends her daughter to school in Kentucky, which allows a religious exemption for immunizations.

 

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