As parents, we can all relate to the challenges of teaching our children
right from wrong. One basic universal lesson from childhood is that you don't
take something that doesn't belong to you without permission.
This fundamental ethical principal is the primary reason why the Texas
Legislature overwhelmingly passed and the governor signed a law requiring
doctors to ask a parent's permission before they release a child's confidential
immunization record and enter it into a state government operated immunization
surveillance database.
Some health department employees and medical trade associations are alleging
that fundamental parental and medical privacy rights are a burden and not worth
preserving. They want to gut the current law and require that all doctors and
insurance companies release every child's private immunization record and
identifying information to the Texas Department of Health without parental
knowledge or consent. Under their proposal, a written request by a parent
directly to the state agency to remove their child from the registry would
trigger the child's information being moved to yet a another TDH database of
"non-consenters," still resulting in the tagging and tracking of every single
child. Even though there would be nothing a parent could do to stop the
unauthorized release of their child's records to TDH or to prevent their child
from being included in a TDH database, they are deceptively calling this
proposal an "opt-out" system.
It gets worse. While registry proponents have been promising that the data is
safe and secure, for the last six years they have been stealing it behind our
backs in total defiance of the current law.
Almost a year after the required informed consent law was passed, a
legislative staffer who personally worked on the legislation learned that his
children were being tracked by TDH without his permission. This prompted a
senator's legislative inquiry, which revealed that 3.3 million Texas children
had been entered illegally by TDH. Personal information, including names,
addresses and parents' Social Security numbers, had been downloaded into the
immunization database from the child's confidential birth certificate records.
Although a peace offering by the health commissioner resulted in hundreds of
thousands of these illegally obtained records being purged, many parents have
reported that even though they never gave consent, their children are still in
the database and their attempts to have their child's record removed have been
unsuccessful.
It didn't stop there.
Today, TDH obtains what they consider to constitute positive "opt-in"
informed consent from a one millimeter-sized check box on the birth certificate
application to which hospital staff frequently check "yes" for the mother who is
busy delivering her baby at the time the form is filled out. Parents who have
known to ask for the form to consciously look and check off "no" on registry
consent question 19(b) have reported that hospital staff sometimes will even
retype their form and change the answer to yes. These subversive tactics are the
way that TDH is able to make the highly questionable claim that all these
parents "want" to participate in the registry.
The public needs to know that the reasoning of those who are attacking our
current "opt-in" law is weak; as weak as their efforts have been to follow it.
For example, we don't have an immunization rate problem; we have bureaucrats
with a self-serving math deficiency. The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention immunization surveys cited include more doses of vaccines than our
state law requires, so even when children are fully immunized according to the
law in Texas, they don't count. The truth is that when looking at individual
rates for individual vaccines, we are already in the 80 and 90 percentiles for
2-year-olds and in the high 90 percentile overall for kids entering
kindergarten.
In fact, gutting the existing parental consent provisions would put parents
who care about medical privacy in the position of having to choose between
having their kids vaccinated or keeping their children's medical records out of
an intrusive government database. That can only have a negative affect on
immunization rates.
Just as many parents don't want the state tracking and micromanaging their
health-care choices for their children, many private practice doctors have no
interest in having their practices watched and their performance delivering
vaccines rated. We've spoken with many doctors who feel they can keep track of a
child's records just fine and don't want or need any help from TDH. Forcing a
doctor to release the confidential medical record of a child against the will of
a parent will drive a wedge of mistrust in a relationship crucial to the health
of the child.
Since the only way TDH is willing to populate a statewide immunization
tracking system is through deceit and brute force, maybe it doesn't need to
exist at all. Certainly the legislature should not reward unethical and illegal
behavior with more power and control. They should look for ways to make TDH and
doctors follow the existing law. In the meantime, do you know where your
children's medical records are?
Richardson and Rex are co-founders of Parents Requesting Open Vaccine
Education (PROVE).
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?"