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Florida to End All Vaccine Mandates, State Officials Say

Rejected submission by upstart at 2025-09-05 00:56:56
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Florida to end all vaccine mandates, state officials say [axios.com]:

Florida will end all state vaccine mandates, Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo announced Wednesday.

Why it matters: Vaccines have prevented [who.int] the deaths of tens of millions worldwide in the past 50 years — and Florida wants to become the first state in the U.S. to stop requiring them.

  • The state already leads the southeast [axios.com] in non-medical vaccine exemptions among kindergartners, and the rollback could mean fewer school children are inoculated against deadly viruses like measles and polio.

Catch up quick: Ladapo, a well-known vaccine critic, announced his plans to end the practice via an administrative rule at a news conference in Hillsborough County, comparing vaccine mandates to "slavery."

Friction point: Gov. Ron DeSantis said that the state Department of Health can end vaccine mandates not written into state law, but any others will require action by the Legislature.

  • He acknowledged neither he nor Ladapo has spoken with state lawmakers about pursuing those changes.

Between the lines: State statutes currently require [state.fl.us] school children to get immunized against seven illnesses: polio, diphtheria, measles, whooping cough, mumps and tetanus.

  • The statute allows the state Department of Health to add vaccines to the list, but not remove any.
  • As of August, the state Department of Health [floridahealth.gov] required students to be vaccinated against four additional illnesses: chickenpox, Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib), hepatitis B, and pneumococcal disease.

What they're saying: "Who am I to tell you what you should put in your body?" Ladapo said at Wednesday's press conference.

  • "What you put into your body is because of your relationship with your body and God," he added. The government does not have that right."

The other side: "This is devastating news," Jill Roberts, associate professor at the University of South Florida's College of Public Health, told Axios.

  • "You're going to leave kids susceptible to diseases that are deadly and have lifelong consequences," she said.

How it works: In Florida, a parent can obtain a religious exemption for their child by visiting the county's health department.

  • No appointment is needed, and no questions are asked, per the state Department of Health.
  • The state logged 10,556 non-medical exemptions in the 2024–25 school year, the second-highest total after Texas with 15,207, per the CDC.

Editor's note: This story was updated with additional details.

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Original Submission