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Worship Optional: Joining a Church to Evade Vaccine

January 14, 2003
By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.






MEDFORD, N.J. - "This is to certify that the family of
Donald McNeil is enrolled as members of this religious
order and is subject to the tenets and beliefs of this
order. No member of the Congregation shall have injected,
ingested or infused into the body any foreign materials of
unhealthy or unnatural composition. No member of the
Congregation shall have surgical instruments cutting or
piercing the tissues of the body."

It is not hard to get a religious exemption to the
childhood immunization laws. To join the Congregation of
Universal Wisdom, all it takes is a letter to this neat
house in the Pine Barrens with the "Don't Tread on Me" flag
above the mailbox and the sculptured spine on the garage,
where Dr. Walter P. Schilling, a chiropractor, runs the
congregation from his den.

He replies to inquiries by mailing a copy of the religion's
tenets, which emphasize that "Universal Wisdom is the
Supreme Master of all levels in creation" and that "laying
on of hands to the vertebrae shall be the sole means of
maintaining the life force."

Once the families have confirmed that they "will aspire to
live by" the tenets and have paid at least $1 of the $75
"customary donation" as a sign of commitment, they receive
their membership certificates.

Dr. Schilling does not require that applicants give up
other religions, and he is not too exacting about wording:
he accepted a vague letter saying an applicant could follow
the tenets if he chose to. In New Jersey, where Dr.
Schilling says he has 2,988 members, this certificate
guarantees a waiver from the state's requirement for
vaccinations against polio, measles and a dozen other
childhood diseases, no questions asked. Under a 1995 ruling
by the state attorney general, a school may not pass
judgment on a religious exemption request.

"If they have a deeply held belief, they get the
exemption," said Dr. Eddy Bresnitz, New Jersey's chief
epidemiologist. "We don't define what a deeply held belief
is."

Dr. Schilling's church was founded in 1975 to defend
"straight chiropractors" like himself, who regard Western
medicine as paganism or Satanism. Now he claims 5,520
members, mostly families wanting to avoid vaccination, in
28 states.

Forty-seven states - all but Arkansas, Mississippi and West
Virginia - offer religious exemptions to vaccination; only
17 offer "philosophical" exemptions, available virtually on
demand. Parents opposing vaccination often apply for
religious exemptions when they cannot get philosophical or
medical ones, public health officials say.

Although more than 90 percent of all American children have
had their vaccinations, exemptions appear to be increasing,
and to concentrate in pockets where higher numbers of
parents object.

In Montclair, N.J., for example, less than 1 percent of
school-age children have exemptions, but one cooperative
school has a much higher rate.

National data do not distinguish between exemption types,
said Daniel A. Salmon, a vaccination expert at the Johns
Hopkins School of Public Health. But in Massachusetts,
which he has studied and which does not offer philosophical
exemptions, religious exemptions are on the rise. The
American Medical Association opposes both types, saying
they increase the risk of epidemics.

In many states, just what constitutes "religious exemption"
is hazy. A study in The American Journal of Public Health
in 2000 showed that only 21 of the 47 states had ever
denied one. "A lot of states call their exemptions
religious, but anyone who wants it, gets it," Mr. Salmon
said.

The issue has never come before the Supreme Court, but
state laws that have listed exempt faiths - Christian
Science, for example - have been struck down in courts on
the basis of the First Amendment.

Religious exemptions do have public health consequences.
The last two American polio outbreaks were in Amish and
Mennonite communities in 1979 and in a Christian Science
school in Connecticut in 1972. Measles killed 3 students of
125 infected in a Christian Science school in 1985, and a
similar-size outbreak among the Amish in 1987 and 1988
killed 2 people. In 1991, 890 cases of rubella, leading to
more than a dozen deformed children, hit Amish areas.

Mr. Salmon argues that such religious enclaves do not
present much of a public health problem except to their
members. "We're unlikely to see a population explosion
among the Amish," he said. "And these people came here for
religious freedom, came here to be left alone. That's very
difficult to take away."

But religious conversions announced just in time to avoid
vaccinating children "have the potential to grow," Mr.
Salmon said. "If you look on the Internet, you can find
what Scripture to quote," he said. "Is that really a
religion?"

One of the toughest places to get an exemption is New York
City. City health codes fine principals $2,000 a day for
any unvaccinated child in a school, and the Board of
Education's lawyers take the position that no established
religion formally forbids vaccination, said Dr. Terry Marx,
the board's chief physician, so applicants must write
letters detailing their personal beliefs.

Many applications are "bogus," she said. She rejects
medical ones "if they're based on quackery." Another
official, who said her boss had told her not to give an
interview, assesses the sincerity of religious ones.

Dr. Marx had never heard of the Congregation for Universal
Wisdom, she said, but after reading its tenets on its Web
site, said: "If someone were really and truly part of this
church and upheld its beliefs, that would pass the test.
But only if somebody really obeyed this. That means they
wouldn't treat their kid for asthma, wouldn't take their
kid for an appendectomy."

At the Montclair Cooperative School, 10 of the 160 students
have Dr. Schilling's certificates. That frustrates
Elizabeth Tengwall, the school nurse, who feels that some
parents are exploiting a legal loophole.

To them, she said, the notion of an outbreak of measles,
whooping cough or polio "is so foreign that they think it's
not going to happen."

But as a hospital nurse, she has treated a baby with
whooping cough. "It was frightening," she said. "It coughed
so much it couldn't catch a breath and turned blue. You
could just spray oxygen at its face."

The parents usually do not cite religion first, she said,
but mention unproven fears. "They say they're worried about
the autism link, or that it's just not natural to inject
weakened viruses into their kids."

At one time, being helpful, she steered them to other
parents in Dr. Schilling's congregation.

"But now I see what's going on," she said. "I hope I wasn't
enabling them."

In interviews, Dr. Schilling - Brother Schilling in
correspondence - seems a polite, gentle man with pacifist
and environmentalist beliefs and a sincere passion for his
religion, though the impression is knocked somewhat off
kilter by his quick wit and the accent that lingers from
his Queens childhood.

He adopts greyhounds facing euthanasia when their dog-track
careers are over. He doesn't own a gun and is religiously
opposed to war, but joined the National Rifle Association
because it fights government restrictions.

He doesn't smoke or drink and, as a chiropractor, even
shuns X-rays because he considers them irreligiously
invasive. He decorated his Christmas tree with little human
spines, which he gives away as key chains. As a minister,
he occasionally performs weddings.

He founded the Congregation - which does pay taxes, he said
- with three other chiropractors, who have since died. The
most radical was Dr. Daniel J. Dalton, who preached that
physicians were agents of Satan, pharmacy was witchcraft,
and Western medicine evolved from worship of the Greek god
Hermes and adopted his symbol, the caduceus, a
snake-entwined winged wand.

"I wouldn't say he was a fanatic, but that would give you a
sense of him," Dr. Schilling said. "What other people see
as Western medicine, we see as a state-imposed pagan
religion.

"We're constantly intimidated by the system. Now, when
we're intimidated, we intimidate back."

Asked how he would feel if a child with an exemption from
him contracted polio, he answered: "If they're clear
spinally, if the communication between God and the body is
clear and they're working at 100 percent efficiency, then
their resistance will be higher. Unless God wants them to
leave. God does want people to leave eventually. I wouldn't
feel I'd made a mistake. I'd feel it was part of God's
will."

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/14/health/14VACC.html?ex=1043547323&ei=1&en=9045f1681e454e72



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