Catholic social teaching and the duty to vaccinate
by Xavier Symons | 25 Mar 2017
What does Catholicism say about vaccination?
In a target article in the latest edition of the American Journal of Bioethics, two ethicists argue from the perspective of Catholic Social Teaching (CST) that parents have a duty to vaccinate their children.
Paul J. Carson and Anthony T. Flood of North Dakota State University invoke principles of CST such as solidarity and the common good to justify mandatory immunisation, arguing that adherents of Roman Catholicism have a social duty to help society achieve herd immunity.
In the context of vaccination, these principles and values entail a duty to vaccinate. By not vaccinating ourselves and our children, we forsake solidarity with our neighbors and commitment to the common good...refusing vaccination violates the requirements of personal justice insofar as the act fails to give others their due...if a minimal risk on our part greatly decreases the health risks of the vulnerable, we owe it to them to do so.
https://www.bioedge.org/bioethics/catholic-social-teaching-and-the-duty-to-vaccinate/12239
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/15265161.2017.1284914