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The rise of anti-vaccination legislation in two Midwestern US states: Implications for politics, policy, and society

  • Filip Viskupič EMAIL logo , Zachary Liebl and David L. Wiltse
Published/Copyright: December 31, 2023
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Abstract

During the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, vaccination became a contested issue between politicians at both national and state levels as well as among the public, which became increasingly polarized over this matter. Across the country, a large number of bills were proposed in state legislatures that had the potential to reduce vaccination rates. This short commentary mapped the growth of anti-vaccination legislation in two Midwestern states: South Dakota and Minnesota. We documented the increased volume and scope of anti-vaccination bills and discussed the implications for politics, health, and society. More specifically, it is likely that similar anti-vaccination bills will be proposed in future legislative sessions, which will impose further challenges on public health officials seeking to restore the public’s trust in vaccines.

1 Introduction

The politicization of vaccination was one of the challenges to the management of the outbreak of COVID-19 in the United States. Particularly after COVID-19 vaccines became widely available to the public, vaccination became a contentious issue between the Republican and Democratic parties. While the communication from Democratic Party leaders was mostly in line with recommendations from public health authorities, some Republican Party leaders, including former President Trump, spread inaccurate information about COVID-19 vaccination. The partisan divide over COVID-19 vaccines and vaccination policy translated into state-level politics. Republican lawmakers in state legislatures nationwide proposed bills aimed at banning COVID-19 vaccination requirements, adding barriers to vaccinations, and providing vaccination exemptions.

The COVID-19 public health emergency ended on May 11, 2023. Even though the immediate threat from COVID-19 diminished, the 3-year experience of the pandemic likely had long-term consequences on matters of public health, particularly vaccination. Scholars warned that negative attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccines people developed during the pandemic might “spill over” into attitudes toward other vaccines [1]. They also noted that the experience of the past 3 years might have breathed new life into the anti-vaccine moment [2]. It is likely that we will see a greater number of anti-vaccination initiatives compared to the years prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Given the high number of anti-vaccination proposals in recent years, state legislatures are an area where we could observe the growing opposition to vaccines.

This commentary had two goals. First, we mapped the increase in anti-vaccination bills introduced in the South Dakota and Minnesota state legislatures since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Second, we discussed the potential impacts of the growth of these legislative proposals on politics, public health policy, and society in these two Midwestern states.

2 Methodology

We utilized the LegiScan database to search for bills introduced in the South Dakota and Minnesota state legislatures during the 2013–2023 period. We used the following keyword combination to search for bills: (“Vaccine” OR “Vaccination” OR “Immunization”) NOT (“Naloxone” OR “Omnibus” OR “Animal” OR “AIDS” OR “HIV” OR “Vision” OR “Abortion” OR “Mammogram” OR “Opioid” OR “Veterinarian” OR “Tribal”). Next, we excluded those bills that did not appear to be related to vaccination policy. Afterward, the three authors independently coded all bills as either anti-vaccination or not anti-vaccination. Following the extant literature, we defined anti-vaccination bills as “having the potential to decrease vaccination rates” [3,4]. Figure A1 visualizes how the anti-vaccination bills were identified.

3 The rise of anti-vaccination legislation

The initial search yielded 248 bills – 22 from South Dakota and 226 from Minnesota. After excluding bills that appeared to be unrelated to vaccination policy, we obtained 207 bills – 20 from South Dakota and 187 from Minnesota. In the end, we classified 151 bills as anti-vaccination bills – 18 from South Dakota and 133 from Minnesota. Intercoder reliability was 81.2%, which is in line with similar studies [3]. Table A1 provides a complete list of all anti-vaccination bills from South Dakota and Minnesota.

Despite the differences in the political landscapes of the two states (the South Dakota legislature has half the members of the Minnesota legislature and South Dakota’s legislative session is no longer than 40 days), there was a very similar pattern in the proposed anti-vaccination legislation. First, none of the proposed bills became law. In South Dakota, where the Republican Party holds a supermajority in both the House and Senate, 83.3% of the proposed anti-vaccination bills failed to pass the chamber of origin, and the rest failed to win support in the other chamber. In Minnesota, where the two parties split the control of House and Senate during the period we examined (the Democratic Party currently has a slight majority in both chambers), 98% of the proposed anti-vaccination bills were defeated in committee and only 2% came up for vote in the chamber (pending bills in the current session excluded). Second, anti-vaccination bills were proposed overwhelmingly by Republican lawmakers – 94.4% of anti-vaccination bills in South Dakota and 96.2% of anti-vaccination bills in Minnesota had a primary sponsor from the Republican Party. Democratic Party lawmakers rarely served as co-sponsors – only 11.1% of anti-vaccination bills in South Dakota and 13.5% of anti-vaccination bills in Minnesota were co-sponsored by a Democrat.

Third, the majority of anti-vaccination bills were proposed after COVID-19 vaccines became widely available to the public and vaccination became the main policy to stop the spread of the virus. In South Dakota, there were only three anti-vaccination bills proposed between 2013 and 2020. Since 2021, when COVID-19 vaccinations became a subject of a heated political debate, there were 15 bills proposed in total, a fivefold increase. Eight anti-vaccination bills were proposed in the 2022 legislative session, and five in the 2023 session.

Over time, the proposed anti-vaccination bills in South Dakota became broader in scope and targeted a wider range of vaccinations. In 2022, six of the eight proposed bills were specific to COVID-19 vaccination, generally seeking to prohibit vaccine mandates for COVID-19. However, in 2023, four of the five proposed anti-vaccination bills targeted vaccination more broadly, including House Joint Resolution 5003 – a proposed constitutional amendment that would grant citizens the right to refuse any vaccine or medical treatment. The most sweeping of these proposals was Senate bill 130, which sought to dilute the religious exemption from providing evidence of doctrinal teaching of a parent’s religion to a “sincerely held religious or philosophical belief” held by an individual parent or guardian.

We uncovered a similar pattern among the anti-vaccination bills proposed in the Minnesota legislature. Between 2013 and 2020, there were 25 anti-vaccination bills proposed. Since 2021, when COVID-19 vaccines became widely available, 108 bills were proposed, more than a fourfold increase. The scope of these proposals became increasingly broad and went beyond COVID-19 vaccines. During the most recent legislative session, there have been 32 bills proposed, with only two being COVID-19 specific. One example is House bill 680, which established a “vaccine recipient bill of rights” with the right “to determine what is in the individual’s own best medical interest” in regard to vaccination.

Overall, we found an increase in anti-vaccination bills introduced since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. There was a clear uptick in legislative activity on weakening well-established vaccination mandates for diseases beyond COVID-19. While COVID-19 vaccination was likely the catalyst for this flurry of legislative activity, the reach of the proposed legislation was far beyond COVID-19 vaccination policy into a policy sphere where we have traditionally seen bipartisan consensus. The remainder of this commentary discussed the broader implications of these developments.

4 Implications for politics

Although none of the proposed anti-vaccination measures has been enacted in law, the mere presence of a large number of such proposals already affected both states. Politics represents one area where we have already seen a significant impact. During the COVID-19 pandemic, anti-vaccination attitudes, which used to occupy the fringes, moved into mainstream politics. Vaccination policy became one of the main political cleavages between the Republican and Democratic parties.

Given the current political climate, politicians particularly at the local and state levels might now have more incentive to continue proposing laws that restrict access to vaccination or provide vaccination exemptions. As vaccination policy is becoming a major issue, lawmakers have an incentive to introduce legislative proposals even when they know that they have little chance of success. Such proposals might increasingly become part of a strategy to draw attention or raise funds. For example, Dr. Scott Jensen, a former Minnesota state senator, managed to secure the Republican Party nomination for the 2022 gubernatorial election after his anti-vaccination rhetoric brought him to national prominence [5].

It is likely that similar anti-vaccination bills will be proposed in future legislative sessions beyond South Dakota and Minnesota. Anti-vaccination legislature might over time become routinized. Given the overlap between anti-vaccination and general anti-science attitudes, there is a possibility that bills targeting other domains of health and health policy will be proposed in the near future.

5 Implications for public health officials and healthcare workers

The growth of anti-vaccination legislation during COVID-19 added to the challenges facing public health officials and healthcare providers. Some public health officials and healthcare providers already faced pressure and were targets of hate speech and online campaigns due to their involvement in promoting COVID-19 vaccination. The proposition of such anti-vaccination legislation created additional challenges in communicating to the public the benefits of vaccination.

The growth in increasingly broader anti-vaccination proposals creates challenges for public health officials as they prepare for future health emergencies. The creation, implementation, and evaluation of strategies to increase vaccination confidence will be challenging given the shifting legislative landscape. Reinforcing trust in the medical community, which was undermined due to the spread of misinformation during the COVID-19 pandemic, will be even more challenging in the context of the growing volume of anti-vaccination legislation.

6 Implications for society

The increase in anti-vaccination legislative proposals could negatively affect people’s confidence in vaccines. Given the fast pace of COVID-19 vaccine development and the perceived novelty of the mRNA technology, an understandable degree of concern already existed regarding their safety and effectiveness. The anti-vaccination proposals were covered extensively by the state and local media in both states [6,7], which could undermine people’s trust in vaccines, science, public health authorities, and healthcare workers. Scholars already documented a growth in anti-vaccine discourse on the social network X (formerly known as Twitter), targeting not only COVID-19 but also influenza vaccines [8]. Such developments are cause for concern, as research linked low trust in government and low trust in medical doctors to vaccine hesitancy [9].

Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (DTaP), polio, and measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccination rates among kindergarten-aged children have declined in South Dakota in the recent years. In addition, Minnesota recorded 22 cases of measles in 2022, which was the third-highest annual figure since 2000 [10]. The growing number of increasingly broader anti-vaccination legislative proposals could likely lead to a further decline in vaccination rates among vulnerable populations.

7 Conclusion

This brief commentary documented the rise of anti-vaccination legislation in South Dakota and Minnesota since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Anti-vaccination sentiment has always been present in society; however, it becomes particularly dangerous when it becomes part of mainstream politics. COVID-19 vaccination quickly became a contested issue between Republican and Democratic politicians, and we saw bills against mandatory COVID-19 vaccination and expanding exemptions. The legislative proposals became broader in scope and targeted multiple vaccines. We discussed the implications of the rise of anti-vaccination legislation for society, public health officials, and politics. Given the momentum that anti-vaccination activists and ideas gained in our study, the “anti-vaccination moment” is likely to remain in the coming future.


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  1. Funding information: The authors state no funding involved.

  2. Author contributions: FV – conceptualization, methodology, formal analysis, data curation, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing, supervision. ZL – methodology, formal analysis, investigation, data curation, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing; DW – formal analysis, data curation, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing.

  3. Conflict of interest: The authors state no conflict of interest.

  4. Ethical approval: The conducted research is not related to either human or animal use.

  5. Data availability statement: All data generated or analyzed during this study are included in this published article and its supplementary information file.

Appendix
Figure A1 
                  Flow diagram of the identification of anti-vaccination bills.
Figure A1

Flow diagram of the identification of anti-vaccination bills.

Table A1

List of anti-vaccination bills, South Dakota and Minnesota, 2013–2023

Minnesota
2023
HF 2720 Employers prohibited from requiring or incentivizing public display of medical information, and civil and criminal penalties imposed [Text]
SF 2638 Commissioner of health prohibition from modifying immunization requirements for enrollment in an elementary or secondary school or child care facility to require immunizations against COVID-19 [Text]
HF 2540 Commissioner of health prohibited from modifying immunization requirements for enrollment in elementary or secondary school or child care facility to require immunizations against COVID-19 [Text]
SF 923 Government vaccine mandates enforcement prohibition; proof of natural antibodies as an alternative to vaccination allowance [Text]
HF 1896 Government vaccine mandate enforcement prohibited, and proof of presence of natural antibodies allowed as alternative to vaccination [Text]
SF 1106 Consent for vaccination requirement [Text]
HF 1860 Consent for vaccination required, consent coercion and discrimination prohibited, and criminal penalties imposed [Text]
SF 2278 Certain health care providers requirement to report adverse vaccination events and disclose certain information [Text]
SF 1105 Health care providers administering vaccines requirement to disclose certain information to patients [Text]
HF 1879 Health care providers administering vaccines required to disclose information to patients, reports of adverse reactions to vaccines required, and content of an informed consent form specified [Text]
SF 2277 Vaccination consent requirement [Text]
SF 2279 Vaccination consent addition to the Human Rights Act [Text]
SF 204 Vaccine requirements establishment prohibition [Text]
HF 1226 Establishment of vaccine requirements prohibited, and exceptions provided [Text]
HF 1380 Establishment of vaccine requirements prohibited, and exceptions provided [Text]
SF 3263 William Shegstad Healthcare Advocates Act establishment [Text]
HF 3271 William Shegstad Healthcare Advocates Act established, and civil penalties provided [Text]
SF 488 Vaccine recipient bill of rights establishment [Text]
HF 680 Vaccine recipient bill of rights established [Text]
SF 2384 Commissioner of human services rescinding public assistance benefits due to vaccination status prohibition [Text]
HF 2545 Commissioner of human services prohibited from rescinding public assistance benefits due to vaccination status [Text]
SF 938 Local enforcement of federal vaccine passports prohibition; civil cause of action establishment [Text]
HF 1905 Local enforcement of federal vaccine passports prohibited, and civil cause of action created [Text]
SF 576 Parent or legal guardian requirement to be present for vaccine administration to a minor [Text]
HF 885 Parent or legal guardian required to be present for vaccine administration to a minor [Text]
SF 650 State agencies and local units of government prohibition from offering vaccine incentives [Text]
HF 954 State agencies and local units of government prohibited from offering vaccine incentives [Text]
SF 811 Higher education immunizations exemption expansion [Text]
HF 1953 Exceptions from immunizations expanded [Text]
SF 1076 Limits establishment for contact tracing, digital contact tracing, immunizations, communicable disease testing, and the required disclosure of certain information [Text]
HF 704 Contact tracing, digital contract tracing, immunizations, communicable disease testing, and required disclosure of information limits established; destruction of data required, mandatory digital contact tracing by employers prohibited, and civil penalties provided [Text]
SF 937 Employers requiring or incentivizing public safety of medical information prohibition; civil and criminal penalties imposition [Text]
2021–2022
HF 2530 Vaccine passport, vaccine pass, and vaccine credentials for immunization status requirement prohibited [Text]
SF 2610 Vaccine credentials for immunization status prohibition [Text]
HF 4046 Discrimination based on vaccine status or immunity passport prohibited [Text]
SF 2430 Vaccine passports for COVID-19 immunization status requirement prohibition [Text]
SF 2474 Vaccine passports for COVID-19 immunization status requirement prohibition [Text]
SF 2475 Vaccine passports for COVID-19 immunization status requirement prohibition [Text]
HF 2511 COVID-19; immunization status vaccine passport requirement prohibited [Text]
SF 3022 Resolution for the State of Minnesota to protect its citizens against unconstitutional and medically irresponsible COVID-19 vaccine mandates [Text]
HF 2348 COVID-19; a resolution protecting against unconstitutional and medically irresponsible vaccine mandates [Text]
HF 2899 COVID-19 and influenza vaccine requirements prohibited [Text]
SF 1172 Disclosure of vaccine ingredients requirement and appropriation [Text]
HF 1194 Vaccine ingredient disclosure required, and money appropriated [Text]
SF 2820 Government vaccine mandates prohibition; proof of presence of natural antibodies as an alternative to vaccination establishment [Text]
HF 2694 Government vaccine mandate enforcement prohibited, and proof of presence of natural antibodies allowed as an alternative to vaccination [Text]
SF 2394 Consent for vaccination requirement; consent coercion and discrimination prohibition; criminal penalties imposition authorization [Text]
HF 1245 Vaccination consent required, consent coercion and discrimination prohibited, and criminal penalties imposed [Text]
HF 2627 Health care providers required to report adverse vaccination events and disclose information [Text]
HF 2159 Vaccination consent required, consent coercion and discrimination prohibited, and criminal penalties imposed [Text]
SF 2612 Consent for vaccination requirements [Text]
SF 2607 Health care provider vaccine disclosure requirements [Text]
HF 26 Health care providers administering vaccines required to disclose information to patients, adverse reactions to vaccines reports required, and informed consent form content specified [Text]
HF 3711 Health care providers administering vaccines required to disclose information to patients, adverse reactions to vaccines reports required, and content of an informed consent form specified [Text]
HF 452 Statutory immunization requirement exemption provided for sincerely held religious belief [Text]
SF 292 Statutory immunization requirements exemption for religious beliefs [Text]
SF 2613 Consent of vaccination requirement [Text]
HF 1243 Vaccination consent required [Text]
HF 1244 Human Rights Act vaccination consent added [Text]
SF 2611 Human Rights Act vaccination status discrimination addition [Text]
HF 3214 Vaccine requirement establishment prohibited, and exception provided [Text]
SF 4489 Establishment of vaccine requirements prohibition [Text]
HF 3158 COVID-19; vaccine requirement prohibited, and exceptions provided [Text]
HF 4093 Vaccination of minor consent of a parent or guardian required [Text]
SF 4332 William Shegstad Healthcare Advocates Act [Text]
HF 4723 William Shegstad Healthcare Advocates Act established, and civil penalties provided [Text]
HF 2901 Mandatory immunization damage cause of action established [Text]
SF 3550 Mandatory immunization damages cause for action establishment [Text]
HF 4525 Mandatory immunization damages cause of action established [Text]
HF 3517 COVID-19; state funding prohibited for public and private entities enforcing vaccine mandate or vaccine passport [Text]
HF 2760 COVID-19; vaccine mandate injuries cause of action provided [Text]
HF 2759 COVID-19; employer liability cause of action provided for injuries caused by vaccines [Text]
HF 2843 COVID-19; unemployment insurance benefits ensured for individual terminated for not adhering to vaccine mandate, and COVID-19 proof of recovery allowed as vaccination substitution [Text]
SF 2424 Employment discrimination based on vaccination status prohibition [Text]
SF 2737 Employment discrimination based on vaccination status prohibition [Text]
HF 3423 Discrimination based on vaccination status prohibited [Text]
HF 2541 Employment discrimination based on vaccination status prohibited [Text]
SF 3475 Discrimination based on an individual's vaccination status prohibition [Text]
HF 3820 Human rights; discrimination based on vaccination status prohibited [Text]
HF 3841 Natural immunity exemption provided in lieu of employer vaccination or testing requirements [Text]
SF 3491 Unemployment insurance benefits for an individual terminated for not adhering to the vaccination mandate authorization; proof of recovery from COVID-19 as a substitution for required vaccination establishment [Text]
HF 2897 Health freedom sanctuary established, governor's peacetime emergency powers limited, and mandatory vaccinations and school district mask requirements prohibited [Text]
SF 2693 Health freedom sanctuary establishment, governor's peacetime emergency powers limitations, and mandatory vaccinations and school district mask requirements prohibition [Text]
SF 3035 Health freedom sanctuary establishment, governor's peacetime emergency powers limitations, and mandatory vaccinations and school district mask requirements prohibition [Text]
SF 4047 COVID-19; employee injured by vaccination cause of action provided [Text]
HF 3276 Immunization requirement exemption modified for children in child care facilities and students in school and postsecondary education institution [Text]
SF 3061 Mandated vaccinations expansion [Text]
SF 1589 Communicable diseases contact tracing, digital contact tracing, immunizations, and required disclosures limits establishment; data destruction requirement; employer mandatory digital contact tracing prohibition; civil penalties [Text]
HF 2347 Vaccine recipient bill of rights established [Text]
SF 3021 Vaccine recipient bill of rights establishment [Text]
SF 4581 Immunizations exceptions expansion [Text]
SF 1249 A resolution memorializing the President and Congress to hold vaccine manufacturers liable for design defects that result in adverse side effects from vaccines [Text]
HF 1330 A resolution memorializing the President and Congress to hold vaccine manufacturers liable for design defects that result in adverse side effects from vaccines [Text]
HF 667 Employers prohibited from disciplining or discharging employees or applicants for immunization refusal, and civil action remedies provided [Text]
SF 2431 Contact tracing, digital contact tracing, immunizations, communicable disease testing, and certain information disclosure requirements limitation establishment; destruction of certain data requirement; mandatory digital contact tracing by employers prohibition [Text]
HF 1583 Contact tracing, digital contact tracing, immunizations, communicable disease testing, and information disclosure limits established; data destruction required; mandatory employer digital contact tracing prohibited; and civil penalties provided [Text]
HF 261 COVID-19; vaccine availability provided for school employees [Text]
HF 2691 Local enforcement of federal vaccine passports prohibited, and civil cause of action created [Text]
HF 2685 Parent or legal guardian required to be present for vaccine administration to a minor [Text]
SF 2694 Parent or legal guardian presence requirement for vaccine administration to a minor [Text]
HF 533 Employers prohibited from disciplining or discharging employees for immunization refusal, and civil action remedies provided [Text]
SF 1264 Employee immunization refusal employer discipline or discharge prohibition [Text]
HF 4349 COVID-19; vaccine mandate establishment prohibited [Text]
SF 2559 COVID-19 public health disaster response establishment; peacetime emergency declared in Executive Order No. 20-01 termination [Text]
HF 2640 COVID-19; public health disaster response established, and peacetime emergency declared in Executive Order No. 20-01 terminated [Text]
HF 3736 State agencies and local units of government prohibited from offering vaccine incentives [Text]
HF 2801 Medical information public display required or incentivized by employers prohibited, and civil and criminal penalties imposed [Text]
SF 3666 Right establishment for a patient or resident to choose to have support person while receiving care or services [Text]
2019–2020
SF 2911 Resolution memorializing the President and Congress to hold vaccine manufacturers liable for design defects that result in adverse side effects from vaccines [Text]
HF 2862 Vaccines; a resolution memorializing the President and Congress to hold vaccine manufacturers liable for design defects [Text]
SF 3109 Immunization refusal employers discipline or discharge of employee or applicant prohibition [Text]
HF 2825 Vaccines; a resolution memorializing the President and Congress to hold vaccine manufacturers liable for design defects that result in adverse side effects from vaccines [Text]
SF 3814 Immunization requirements for sincerely held religious beliefs exemption authorization [Text]
SF 3110 Vaccine minimum safety standards requirement for any vaccine required to enroll or remain enrolled in an elementary or secondary school [Text]
HF 4208 Statutory immunization requirement exemption provided for sincerely held religious belief [Text]
HF 4348 Vaccine minimum safety standards provided for any vaccine required to enroll or remain enrolled in elementary and secondary school [Text]
HF 4287 Employers prohibited from discipline or discharge for employee or applicant immunization refusal, and civil action remedies provided [Text]
HF 41 Vaccination consent required, consent coercion and discrimination prohibited, and criminal penalties imposed [Text]
HF 40 Vaccination consent required [Text]
HF 42 Human Rights Act; vaccination consent added [Text]
HF 999 Employers prohibited from discipline or discharge for employee or applicant immunization refusal, and civil action remedies provided [Text]
SF 1916 Employer discipline or discharge prohibition for employee or applicant refusal to immunize [Text]
SF 2781 Resolution memorializing the President and Congress to hold vaccine manufacturers liable for design defects that result in adverse side effects from vaccines [Text]
SF 2831 Resolution memorializing the President and Congress to hold vaccine manufacturers liable for design defects that result in adverse side effects from vaccines [Text]
HF 3728 Employers prohibited from disciplining or discharging employees for immunization refusal, and civil action remedies provided [Text]
2017–2018
SF 143 Vaccination and immunization exemption procedures modification [Text]
HF 2005 Health care providers administering vaccines required to disclose information to parents, reports of adverse reactions to vaccines required, and informed consent form content specified [Text]
SF 2660 Mandatory influenza vaccine requirements employee exemptions establishment; employee misconduct definition modification [Text]
HF 96 Immunization exemption procedures modified [Text]
2015–2016
SF 1870 Health care providers vaccination reporting and disclosure requirements [Text]
HF 1978 Health care providers required to report adverse vaccination events and disclose information [Text]
2013–2014
HF 2170 Immunization exemption procedures modified [Text]
South Dakota
2023
SF 2544 Immunization exemption procedures modification [Text]
HB 1216 Establish and revise requirements related to visitation policies and procedures for certain facilities [Text]
SB 125 Prohibit the imposition of additional immunization requirements on children [Text]
HJR5003 Proposing and submitting to the voters at the next general election a new section to Article VI of the Constitution of the State of South Dakota, relating to the right of a person to reject certain medical procedures [Text]
HB 1235 Provide a conscience exemption from a COVID-19 vaccination [Text]
SB 130 Provide for philosophical exceptions to required vaccinations [Text]
2022
SB 211 Protect an individual's conscience from entities requiring the COVID-19 vaccine [Text]
HB 1262 Prohibit discrimination based on a person's vaccination status or possession of an immunity passport and to declare an emergency [Text]
HB 1258 Protect an individual's conscience from entities requiring the COVID-19 vaccine [Text]
HB 1212 Prohibit certain activities related to a person's COVID-19 vaccination status and provide a penalty therefor [Text]
HB 1256 Establish employees' exemptions from employer-imposed COVID-19 vaccine requirements [Text]
HB 1008 Provide a cause of action for certain employees that are required to receive a vaccination as a condition of employment and to declare an emergency [Text]
HB 1224 Extend unemployment insurance benefits to individuals who are unemployed because of their refusal to obtain COVID-19 vaccination [Text]
HB 1211 Prohibit the enforcement of contracts limiting competition on certain matters of conscience [Text]
2021
HB 1097 Provide for philosophical exceptions to required vaccinations [Text]
HB 1159 Prohibit interference with the right to bodily integrity in contagious disease control [Text]
2020
HB 1235 Revise provisions regarding immunizations [Text]
2016
SB 108 Require notice if certain immunizations contain more than trace amounts of mercury [Text]
2015
HB 1059 Allow authorized entities to access immunization information in certain circumstances [Text]
2013
SB 98 Revise certain statutory immunization exemption requirements [Text]

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Received: 2023-09-19
Revised: 2023-12-06
Accepted: 2023-12-11
Published Online: 2023-12-31

© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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