Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/4640
Title: Australia’s ‘No Jab No Play’ policies: history, design and rationales
Authors: Attwell, Katie
Drislane, Shevaun
Keywords: vaccination
vaccination policy
public health policy design
vaccine mandates
Issue Date: Oct-2022
Publisher: Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
Series/Report no.: Communicable Diseases;640-646
Abstract: Objective: Since 2014, five Australian states have enacted ‘No Jab, No Play’ policies requiring children to be fully vaccinated to attend childcare and early education services. We review the five policies and their implications for implementers – including healthcare and childcare service providers – and analyse factors that shaped the design of state policies. Methods: We employed documentary analysis and analysed key informant interviews in NVivo 12. Results: Our findings reveal similarities and differences between state provisions regarding exemptions, grace periods, responsibilities of service providers and sanctions for noncompliance. We elaborate on five factors of influence that have shaped No Jab, No Play policies: i) impetus for change; ii) policy normalisation, growing concurrence and stringency; iii) increased co-optation of childcare providers into vaccination governance; iv) policy influence and lessons; and v) partisan politics and the development of party ideologies over time. Conclusion: A range of factors contribute to how and why Australia’s NJNPlay policies have taken their current forms. Implications for public health: NJNPlay policies impact families and healthcare providers as part of the broader policy ecosystem concerned with maintaining high immunisation rates in Australia. Increased coercion of parents over time has been tempered by partisan positions on exemptions for disadvantage.
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/4640
ISSN: 1753-6405.13289
Appears in Collections:VOL 46 NO 5

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