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Mandating Vaccination: What Counts as a "Mandate" in Public Health and When Should They Be Used?
by Matthew K. Wynia 2007. The American Journal of Bioethics 7(12):2
Recent arguments over whether certain public health interventions
should be mandatory raise questions about what counts as a "mandate." A
mandate is not the same as a mere recommendation or the standard of
practice. At minimum, a mandate should require an active opt-out and
there should be some penalty for refusing to abide by it. Over-loose
use of the term "mandate" and the easing of opt-out provisions could
eventually pose a risk to the gains that truly mandatory public health
interventions, such as childhood vaccines, have provided over the last
50 years. Already, confusion about what counts as a mandate, and about
what criteria should be used to determine when a public health
intervention should be implemented as a mandate, has led to some
inappropriate public policy decisions. For instance, by any reasonable
criteria, the yearly influenza vaccine should be mandatory for health
care workers. To enforce this mandate, those who refuse vaccination
should be required to sign a waiver, and patients - especially those at
high risk from flu - should be informed when they receive care from
unvaccinated practitioners.

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