Family‑focused objections raised on immunization bill; House approves measure
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A delegate told an emotional anecdote about a child’s reaction while opposing House Bill 6‑37; the vice chair said the bill does not change Medicaid coverage and highlighted required informational forms. The bill passed the House, roll call announced 97‑33.
House Bill 6‑37, which adopts recommendations from the state Commission on Public Health and addresses preventive services and pharmacist administration of vaccinations, produced an extended floor exchange on parental information and transparency.
The delegate from Frederick County (speaker 9) described a family case in which a 4‑month‑old allegedly had a reaction after receiving multiple vaccinations at once and reported difficulty obtaining clear ingredient information from providers. The delegate said that parents feel rushed and need clearer information and scheduling options; she announced she would vote "no."
Vice chair (speaker 29) replied that the bill does not change Medicaid coverage and emphasized that providers are required to provide a written form describing each immunization, its purpose and ingredients, and how to report adverse events. She said the bill turns recommendations over to the Secretary of Health and an experienced health‑care background is required for that position.
The measure passed on final reading; the clerk announced the vote as 97 in the affirmative and 33 in the negative.
Representative quotes: "Parents need information. They need to know what to look for, what symptoms can cause be caused issues..." — Delegate from Frederick County (speaker 9). "This bill doesn't deal with that...But this bill, I think, can address some of the concerns...by having the educated, and experienced health care providers... make recommendations and decisions." — Vice chair (speaker 29).
Next steps: the bill moves on after final passage; committee guidance and any further rulemaking would come through the Secretary of Health and implementing agencies.
