Throughline - Outbreak
Episode Date: May 2, 2019More than 700 measles cases have been recorded in the U.S. in the recent outbreak, the worst being in New York. This past April, Mayor Bill de Blasio issued a public health emergency that required res...idents in parts of Brooklyn to get vaccinated or face a fine of $1,000. In this episode, we look back at a 1905 Supreme Court case that set a precedent for enforcing compulsory vaccinations.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Tonight, America on track for its worst measles outbreak in 25 years. The CDC says the number of measles cases being reported is close to the danger zone.
This Orthodox Jewish section of Williamsburg, Brooklyn, is ground zero, where some 250 measles cases have been reported.
90 more cases in just one week.
71 students, 127 staff.
The latest outbreaks are highlighting pockets of unvaccinated people and health
officials are scrambling to stop the nationwide spread. This anti-vax movement has proven to be
very dangerous. Public health officials doing all they can to urge Americans to vaccinate their
children. You're listening to ThruLine from NPR, where we go back in time to understand the present.
Hey, I'm Ramtin Arablui.
I'm Randa Abdel-Fattah.
And on this episode, the question of vaccinations.
Back in 2000, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC,
officially declared that measles had been eliminated.
But now, according to the CDC,
we're in the midst of the biggest outbreak of measles since that declaration.
So what's going on?
Well, public health officials have linked many of the recent outbreaks
to people who have become infected while traveling abroad.
But the question is, why has the infection been able to spread so widely,
especially among American children? I do believe that parents' concerns about vaccine leads to
under-vaccination, and most of the cases that we're seeing are in unvaccinated communities.
However, that's a CDC official testifying before Congress in February. And basically what she's
saying is that people weren't getting their kids vaccinated
because they were scared of vaccines.
And in response to one outbreak in Brooklyn,
We have a situation now where children are in danger.
We have to take this seriously.
The city of New York recently declared
a public health emergency.
The city is mandating vaccinations
for adults and children.
Requiring unvaccinated people to get vaccinated
or face a fine.
For more than a century, authorities have been trying
to use vaccinations as a way of protecting
public health.
And for just as long, some people have resisted.
So we wanted to know
when in American history
have these two sides collided?
And we found a Supreme Court case
from 1905 that dealt with this tension and that New York officials are drawing on today.
The case highlights just how similar things were back in the early 20th century.
To find out more about that case, we called up this guy.
So it's Romtine and Rund?
Yes.
Correct. Perfect.
Okay. I want to make sure I pronounce correctly.
Michael Wilrich.
My name is Michael Wilrich. I teach history at Brandeis University, and I'm the author of a book called Pox, an American History.
Wilrich says that when New York set penalties to enforce vaccinations in Brooklyn, they were relying on a 1905 case of a Swedish Lutheran minister in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Here's the context. A few years
earlier, there was an outbreak of smallpox in a bunch of U.S. cities, including Cambridge.
So public health officials ordered all residents to be vaccinated. This Swedish minister, Henrik
Jacobsen, he refused. He had been vaccinated as a child back in his home country of Sweden and had been made very sick by the vaccine.
And then after he had arrived in the U.S. and had a family, one of his sons had also been sick following vaccination.
And he thought that vaccination was a threat to him.
And so he declined to be vaccinated.
He was brought before a local criminal court and
found guilty. He was fined a pretty nominal amount. I believe it was $5. But then he,
with the support of the local anti-vaccination movement, brought his appeal to the state
Supreme Court and then all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court. All right. So this whole epidemic must have
been pretty bad that health officials, you know, decided to make these vaccinations mandatory
and enforce them. Yeah. Yeah. So the larger context for this was a period in which smallpox
was very much present in the United States. Smallpox is an extremely deadly disease.
It historically had killed about a quarter to a third of the people who became infected with it.
300 million people worldwide died from smallpox in the 20th century alone.
And there had been an effective vaccine against smallpox
since the late 18th century.
It's the original vaccine.
So you have a situation with significant
danger to society and a solution. And what does the government do? Well, it tries to
stamp out the epidemic by compelling everybody to be vaccinated. But the circumstances were
extremely contentious. What do you mean by contentious? People had serious doubts that vaccines worked.
Some people thought that compulsory vaccination was a violationax being perpetrated by vaccine manufacturers themselves
and compliant state legislatures and public health officials inflicted on society for commercial gain.
Other folks had really basic resistance to it because even an effective smallpox vaccination
could make you feel sick or have your arms
swell up for a few days.
People lost days at work in a time when there was no workers' compensation laws.
So there was really significant resistance at the time, not just from parents as you
have today, but also working class people.
And compulsory vaccination was carried out with great force
in immigrant working class communities and particularly in African-American communities.
I found some cases in the South where African-Americans were vaccinated at gunpoint.
So it's a really dramatic set of conflicts in which Jacobson's case arose.
It's interesting because it seems like the fear around vaccines became sort of mixed in with the fear around outsiders, immigrants.
In particular, I'm thinking of the late 18, early 1900s, a little bit before this case happened, I read that Chinese communities
in California were particularly targeted for vaccinations. I'm wondering if you could speak
to that a little. Yeah. So the Chinese community, particularly in San Francisco and now what we use
the term Chinatown, that community was defined as much by public health officials as by
anything else as a community of disease. And so when bubonic plague broke out in San Francisco
in the very early 20th century, the response of the health authorities was to quarantine Chinatown from the rest of the city and to
order that the people there be vaccinated with this very controversial, relatively new vaccine
at the time called the half-kind prophylactic. And if a Chinese resident of that community
wanted to leave at any point, they had to show evidence
that they had been vaccinated.
Some complied and some were made sick by the prophylactic.
This was a community with a really strong sense of rights consciousness that was forged
by the fact that they were so discriminated against in California in the late 19th century. And so they actually sued in federal court saying that this was a violation of the 14th
Amendment's Equal Protection Clause.
And remarkably, the federal court said that's correct, that you can't, without any legitimate
scientific basis, require people just because of their membership in a quote-unquote
race to be vaccinated where the rest of the community was not required to be. So they
established through this important case precedent for equal protection rights in public health.
Very important.
So all this was swirling around when Jacobson's case went before the Supreme Court.
And when we come back, we'll find out what the decision was. So, in 1905, Jacobson was making the argument that he shouldn't have to get vaccinated because vaccines could cause him harm.
And actually, at that time,
there was some truth to that. Vaccines at the time, the basic technology had been proven.
Vaccines were quite effective. A routine vaccination caused discomfort. But in some
instances that were very well recorded at the time, vaccines were associated with serious illness and even death.
The worst episode occurred in Camden, New Jersey in 1901, 1902 during these same epidemics.
There was a serious epidemic of smallpox in that community.
And local health officials ordered all schoolchildren to get vaccinated before entering the schools.
And this was carried out with considerable efficiency and using mainly this particular vaccine manufactured across the river in Philadelphia.
And in due course, nine children who had recently been vaccinated died of tetanus.
In my own research, I became pretty convinced, as many were at the time, that in fact the vaccine had been the vehicle for spreading tetanus among these children.
So it was a great sort of and very publicly aired tragedy. So people kind of had some reason to be concerned, right, about the
health side effects of vaccines. But in the Jacobson case, like what were they arguing
besides health concerns? You know, it's really interesting because Jacobson was making,
and his lawyers were making a really well-positioned argument about individual liberty at a time when individual liberty arguments were being quite successful in the courts. regulations of all sorts, such as hours laws limiting the number of hours a worker could be
required to work in a factory or wage laws or safety regulations and so on, were being challenged
by employers and sometimes by individuals for violating individual property rights and liberty
of contract and that kind of thing. And so Jacobson's lawyers were making this
case that here goes the state again, you know, trying to be paternalistic and violating individual
rights with no reasonable grounds. And they're citing all those other cases I just referred to.
And was Jacobson just like a lone wolf kind of person,
or was there an anti-vax movement going
on at the time that he was a part of? So there was an anti-vaccination movement that was actually a
transatlantic movement with significant levels of communication across the Atlantic, to England in particular. England had a very well-developed anti-vaccination movement in the late 1890s,
and they were so successful politically that they actually persuaded Parliament
to put an exemption in the law in 1898 for, quote-unquote, conscientious objectors.
And this was actually the first use of that term in the political lexicon.
We think of conscientious objection and associate it with conscription or the draft,
but in fact it originated in the anti-vaccination movement.
And then in Massachusetts, which was a real hotbed of anti-vaccination sentiment,
the Massachusetts Anti-Compulsory Vaccination Society tried to
use the statehouse to pass laws banning compulsory vaccination. And with that having failed,
they looked for a good test case and found it in Jacobson. So his case was funded and litigated
by this Massachusetts organization.
Right. So like it's obviously bigger than just Jacobson, just one person.
But what's at stake when the case finally reaches the Supreme Court? opportunity for the first time to consider whether or not it was constitutional for a state government
to order individuals to get vaccinated, whether they wanted to or not, and to subject them to
criminal penalties, to liabilities of various sorts, if they refused to be vaccinated. And the
court resoundingly decided in favor of the power of the government
to order vaccination. Why did they think that this issue, smallpox public health issue, was
too important to even allow for kind of individual liberties to win out?
Yeah, well, the old argument, and this goes back well before Jacobson,
about public health, is that the power of the state, the power of the government to use its
police powers to protect the public health had the same basic origin and government power,
government sovereignty, as did the right of the state to protect the population
from an invasion, military invasion. So in Jacobson's case, when he said, you know,
I'm an individual and you're violating my liberty of belief and my freedom of action,
the response in the majority opinion by Justice Harlan, who himself had been a Civil War veteran, was we ask people during wartime to make
much greater sacrifices. And this is like an invasion, this kind of situation, an epidemic
of smallpox. He basically said that Jacobson had no more right to freedom in this area during an
epidemic than an individual did to resist the draft during a war. I think more
important in the long run for getting the public around vaccination was the fact that vaccines
became more safe. In 1902, 1903, right in the period we're talking about, Congress passed a law regulating biologics. So regulating vaccines and antitoxins,
licensing manufacturers and imposing inspections and regulations on their production.
This pretty clearly made vaccines more safe and it eliminated a glaring contradiction
in the law that had existed up to that point where local and state
governments were compelling people to get vaccinated even as they were doing nothing
to ensure that vaccines were safe. And then Jacobson settled the major constitutional questions
really till this day. Yeah. I mean, is that the legacy of the Jacobson case? I think so. So today,
the Jacobson decision is still good law. So when Mayor de Blasio declared a public health emergency
and mandated that certain areas where measles had broken out, declared mandatory vaccinations
in those areas under penalty of a thousand1,000 fine, that was perfectly consistent with the long tradition of public health law going back to Jacobson.
On the other hand, the epidemics of the early 20th century also have, I think,
legacies in the ways that states have established vaccination laws that include significant protections for people with health risks
or people with strong religious objections to compulsory vaccination,
or even in some cases, simply philosophical exemptions. So state laws have embedded some of the anti-vaccination arguments in them,
even as they, particularly with school children,
require children to get more and more vaccines.
If another case like this were to come up before the court,
do you think the dynamics are different today than they were
when Jacobson came before the Supreme Court?
They're certainly different.
I mean, there is the compulsory vaccination legislation of the early 20th century was
passed during a period of broad sort of middle class, at least, optimism about the state
and what the state could do.
This is the progressive era.
And for some time now,
we've been living in a kind of anti-progressive era where neoliberal anti-statist arguments
have, to a significant degree, carried the day at the highest levels of government.
And so there's been a kind of, I don't know, attenuation of the idea that people are responsible for society beyond their own
concerns. So I do see anti-vaccination arguments today as being kind of slender compared with the
robust arguments of the early 20th century, arguments that were grounded in anti-racism
and claims of equal protection, or grounded in very strong personal liberty claims
in an era of growing government authority or grounded in deeply held beliefs about parents'
rights to take care of their children. The arguments that have been circulating in
anti-vaccination literature in Brooklyn right now seem to be largely focused on pretty specious
and disproven arguments about particular health risks allegedly associated with the MMR vaccine.
So I just think that we need to think very seriously about how to contend with the ongoing problem of scientific authority in a
democracy. And that is certainly a legacy of the early 20th century.
That's it for this week's show. I'm Randa Abdel-Fattah.
I'm Ramtin Arab-Louie.
And you've been listening to ThruLine from NPR.
Our show was produced by me and Ramtin.
Our team includes...
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