Unvaccinated teenager who sued over school ban now has chickenpox

A teen who sued for not being able to participate in school activities because he wasn’t vaccinated for chickenpox has now contracted the illness.

The student’s lawyer Christopher Wiest told The Kentucky Enquirer that 18-year-old Jerome Kunkel came down with the chickenpox last week.

Mr Wiest said the teen was “fine” and “a little itchy”.

After an outbreak, students who weren’t vaccinated were ordered to stay away from Our Lady of the Assumption Church school, in the US state of Kentucky, and activities.

Jerome Kunkel has contracted the chickenpox after suing the Northern Kentucky Health Department. source: CBS
Jerome Kunkel has contracted the chickenpox after suing the Northern Kentucky Health Department. source: CBS

Mr Kunkel sued the Northern Kentucky Health Department, claiming the vaccine is against his religious beliefs, and others joined in.

A judge last month denied the request to return to activities.

Mr Wiest said on Tuesday about half his clients have contracted chickenpox since filing the case.

He said he told parents that a child’s getting chickenpox would be the quickest way to resolve the case, since a bout of chickenpox confers immunity.

The Health Department said in a news release on Wednesday that Mr Wiest’s statement was “alarming and disappointing”.

The department said people who contract chickenpox can expose others to the virus before the disease becomes apparent.

The teen was banned from participating in school activities because he was not vaccinated. Source: Getty
The teen was banned from participating in school activities because he was not vaccinated. Source: Getty

“While the tactic Wiest suggests may provide an individual with future immunity from chickenpox, this infected person can easily spread the virus to other, unsuspecting people, including those particularly vulnerable to this potentially life-threatening infection,” the department said.

Kentucky Governor Matt Bevin said in March during an interview on radio station WKCT that he deliberately exposed his children to chickenpox so they would catch the disease and become immune.

The Republican governor said parents worried about chickenpox should have their children vaccinated but suggested that government shouldn’t mandate the vaccination.

Kentucky requires that children entering kindergarten be vaccinated for chickenpox, but parents may seek religious exemptions or provide proof that a child already had the disease.

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