Friday, May 16, 2025

Mass. Top Court Says Rastafarian Parents Can Bar Vaccination of Their Child Who Is In Temporary State Custody

In Care and Protection of Eve, (MA Sup. Jud. Ct., May 15, 2025), the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court held that the Department of Children and Families could not vaccinate a child in its temporary custody over the religious objections of the child's parents. The Department was granted emergency custody of the child two days after she was born following incidents of domestic violence by the husband against his wife. The couple's three other children had previously been removed because of domestic violence. They are being raised by a relative. At the custody hearing, the parents testified that their Rastafarian religious beliefs were to avoid Western medicine, including vaccines. The lower court held that the child's best interests outweighed the parents' religious beliefs. Massachusetts' highest court reversed the trial court's order that would have allowed vaccination. The Supreme Judicial Court said in part:

Parents who have temporarily lost custody of their child retain a constitutional right to direct the religious upbringing of the child.  When they object to vaccinations of their child on religious grounds, the department must demonstrate that allowing that child to remain unvaccinated would substantially hinder the department's compelling interest in the vaccinations.  As the Commonwealth allows religious exemptions from vaccination for parents who have not lost temporary custody of their children and the department has not demonstrated a consistent application of the vaccination requirement for children within its custody, even as between this child and her siblings, the department has not demonstrated that leaving this child unvaccinated would substantially hinder the department's compelling interests.