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Politics & Government

House Passes Bill Lifting HPV Vaccine Rule

If enacted, the legislation would reverse 2007 law requiring girls to receive vaccination before 6th grade.

RICHMOND (Capital News Service) – The Virginia House of Delegates has voted to repeal the law requiring girls to receive the human papillomavirus vaccine before entering the sixth grade. On a 62-34 vote Friday, delegates passed House Bill 1112, which would rescind the state law mandating the HPV vaccine.

Sixty Republicans and two Democrats voted in favor of the bill, while 30 Democrats and four Republicans opposed HB 1112. Loudoun’s entire delegation voted in support.

Lynchburg Del. Kathy Byron (R-22) — who opposed Virginia’s 2007 HPV vaccination law and has campaigned to overturn it — sponsored the measure. She said that the vaccine has not been adequately tested and that the General Assembly acted hastily in passing the requirement.

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Byron proposed similar legislation last year, and her bill passed the House; however, it died in the Senate Health and Education Committee dominated at the time by Democrats. Republicans now control that committee, where the bill has been referred.

Virginia was the first state requiring girls to receive the HPV vaccine.

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According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, HPV is the most common sexually transmitted disease, and at least half of sexually active people get the virus during their lifetime. HPV, which is spread by sexual contact, causes genital warts and cervical cancer.

In 2006, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Gardasil as an effective vaccine against HPV. Medical experts recommend that for the best protection, girls should receive the vaccine before becoming sexually active.

The state has supported the vaccine through local health departments and spends about $1 million a year. Last year, those departments provided 6,479 doses of the HPV vaccine to 11-year-old girls in Virginia.

Byron said parents, not the government, should decide whether girls should be vaccinated.

During Friday’s debate, Delegate Christopher P. Stolle, R-Chesapeake, a gynecologist, argued against HB 1112. Stolle said the current mandate “ensures that the vaccination will be provided by insurance companies and the state and by the health departments.”

He proposed an amendment to ensure that parents receive information about the vaccine; it was rejected.

In several states, there has been a debate over whether getting the HPV vaccine encourages girls to have sex. Only the Washington, D.C., has followed Virginia in requiring the vaccine. In both jurisdictions, parents can sign a waiver and decline to have their daughters vaccinated.

All of Loudoun’s delegates voted for the bill:

  • Barbara J. Comstock (R-34)
  • Thomas A. “Tag” Greason (R-32)
  • James L. LeMunyon (R-67)
  • Joe T. May (R-33)
  • J. Randall Minchew (R-10)
  • David I. Ramadan (R-87)
  • Thomas Davis Rust (R-86)

[Capital News Service is an entity of Virginia Commonwealth University.]

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