A bill recently introduced in New York requires healthcare providers and practitioners to “provide patients with a list of ingredients contained in vaccines.”
Every provider who administers vaccines would be required to provide information as to the “safety, benefits, risks, and potential side effects of each vaccine,” the bill says. They must also provide a list of each vaccine’s ingredients as provided by the manufacturer.
Healthcare providers would also instruct patients on how they may report an adverse side effect from the inoculation.
A similar bill has been introduced in Oklahoma.
“The purpose of this act is to ensure transparency in vaccine-related health care practices and to establish informed consent standards by requiring health care providers to disclose comprehensive, evidence-based information regarding vaccines before administration,” HB 1079 says.
Under HB 1079, healthcare providers must provide a “complete list of all ingredients in the vaccine, including active and inactive components, consistent with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Vaccine Excipient and Media Summary” as well as a “summary of the testing and development process” for the vaccine and a “comprehensive outline of all known and potential health and safety risks.”
Oklahoma State Senator Dusty Deevers (R) recently introduced a series of bills to “Make Oklahoma Healthy Again.” The bills target medical freedom, health education curriculum, banning direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising, allowing residents to sue pharmaceutical companies, food freedom, and enabling Oklahomans to access information about ingredients used in medications.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has discussed the possibility of banning pharmaceutical advertising. Only two countries allow such advertising to be shown on “the airwaves,” he said, naming New Zealand and the United States.