Gov. Greg Abbott signs a bill which bans Covid-19 vaccine requirements for all private businesses at the Governor’s Mansion in Austin on Nov. 10, 2023. Visual: Julius Shieh/The Texas Tribune
Covid-19 vaccine
requirements for all private businesses, including hospitals, is the latest
blow to medically vulnerable Texans who rely on others’ immunization to shield
themselves from highly transmissible viruses.
Tamer coronavirus
variants and a soft vaccine booster rollout have
contributed to a lessened sense of urgency around the virus. But the new
measure, which Gov. Greg Abbott signed
into law on Friday, could risk the health of groups like organ transplant
recipients, cancer patients, and those with underlying conditions as common as
severe asthma.
These risks led to
some bipartisan dissent during original Senate discussions of the bill,
especially from state Sens. Borris Miles,
D-Houston and Kelly
Hancock, R-Fort Worth, who both take immunosuppressants for their
respective kidney transplants.
“I live a pretty
normal life and am not fearful, but it does make you think about others,”
Hancock said. “There’s just a balance we have to keep in mind — just try to
always think of others and the positions they may be in.”
For one, vaccines
are less effective in some of these patients because their conditions prevent
their bodies from manufacturing the white blood cells that can recognize and
fight off viruses. But even with protection, the virus can exacerbate
underlying conditions and lead to long-term symptoms of the virus, known as long Covid.
Scientists and
health experts agree that the vaccine is safe and effective for most people
with functioning immune systems, in reducing both transmission and severity of
the virus.
“Everybody’s going
to be different, so it’s not automatic that a compromised individual will end
up in the hospital or in the ICU,” said Jimmy Widmer, an internal medicine
specialist. “But what we do know throughout the past three and a half years of
Covid, is that time and time again, study after study has shown that those who
are immunocompromised are hospitalized at a higher rate.”