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Get
ALL The Facts:
Investigate
Before You Vaccinate!
Vaccine Requirements
By State
http://www.immunizationinfo.org/vaccineInfo/index.cfm#state
Vaccine Exemptions
By State
http://www.NVIC.org
Hepatitis
B Exemption for Healthcare Workers
http://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document?p_table=STANDARDS&p_id=10052
http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/hospital/hazards/bbp/declination.html
Question: By OSHA not requiring
the hepatitis B shot, can a person exempt themselves and still
gain (or keep) employment in the healthcare field?
Answer from Sherri Tenpenny, DO:
Yes, they can keep their employment and, if they
get a future needle stick and get, say, hep b or hep c, they can
still claim worker's comp if they file an employee report at the
time of the incident. Like with school exemptions (that most principles,
teachers and parents don't know exist), most employers don't know
that the OSHA exemption exists.
Travel
Vaccines
For information on the vaccination
requirements for foreign countries, go to the CDC website at
www.cdc.gov/travel/index.htm
[PAVE note: PAVE does not advocate
the use of vaccines. The above information is from the Centers
for Disease Control and does not reflect PAVE's beliefs.]
State Vaccination
Registries
This
page has links to each state immunization registry report
for 2003. If you aren't sure what your state is doing in the area
of immunization registries, check this out.
Vaccine Truth Medical exemptions, Religious exemptions and Philosophical exemptions are available.
Religious Exemptions to North Carolina's
Childhood Immunization Requirements What Constitutes a Bona Fide
Religious Belief?
Alliance Defense Fund Help for those whose religious exemption rights may be threatened.
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Rules regarding a
medical exemption
10A NCAC
41A.0404 (2006)
.0404
MEDICAL EXEMPTIONS FROM
IMMUNIZATION
(a)
Certification
of a medical exemption
by a physician pursuant
to G.S. 130A-156 shall
be in writing and shall
state the basis of the
exemption, the specific
vaccine or vaccines the
individual should not
receive, and the length
of time the exemption
will apply for the
individual.
(b)
Medical
contraindications for
which medical exemptions
may be certified by a
physician for
immunizations are
included in the most
recent General
Recommendations of the
Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices,
Public Health Services,
U.S.
Department of Health and
Human Services,
published in the
Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention
publication, the
Morbidity and Mortality
Weekly Report,
which is adopted by
reference including
subsequent amendments
and additions. A copy is
available for inspection
in the Immunization
Section at
1330 St. Mary's Street,
Raleigh, North Carolina.
Internet access is
available by searching
www.cdc.gov/nip.
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