Florida is once again pushing the envelope on public health policy. This time, state leaders are targeting long-standing childhood vaccine requirements. On September 3, Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo, joined by Gov. Ron DeSantis, announced plans to eliminate all vaccine mandates currently required for children to attend school. These include vaccines for measles, mumps, rubella, chickenpox, hepatitis B, polio, and DTaP, which covers diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis.
In a highly controversial statement, Dr. Ladapo compared vaccine mandates to slavery, calling them oppressive and suggesting they violate parental rights. Governor DeSantis, who has long championed anti-mandate policies, stood by the comments.
If implemented, this would make Florida the first state in the nation to fully dismantle school-related vaccine requirements. For decades, these vaccines have helped prevent outbreaks of once-deadly diseases, keeping them virtually eradicated in the United States. The announcement has triggered immediate backlash from public health experts and legal scholars, many of whom warn this could reverse decades of progress in disease prevention.
Despite the strong rhetoric, the policy change is not yet law. Florida health officials can remove some mandates through administrative action, but others -- particularly those embedded in state legislation -- will need to go through the legislature. A "medical freedom package" is expected to be introduced in the next session to handle those changes formally.
The announcement also included the creation of the "Make America Healthy Again" commission, a new initiative led by Lt. Gov. Jay Collins and First Lady Casey DeSantis. The commission will reportedly review Florida's entire public health framework, further signaling a significant shift in how the state handles healthcare policy.
Many public health professionals are sounding the alarm, arguing that removing these vaccine requirements could lead to new outbreaks of diseases that had been under control for decades. Measles and polio, once considered eliminated in the U.S., could resurface, especially in communities with low vaccination rates. Experts also point to the risk of Florida becoming a case study in what happens when mandatory immunizations are eliminated.
As of now, the state's vaccine mandates are still in place, but the groundwork for their repeal is actively being laid. Administrative adjustments will likely begin soon, followed by legislative proposals that could fully strip the requirements.
Parents, educators, and healthcare workers are watching closely. While supporters call the move a long-overdue return to parental choice, critics see it as a dangerous gamble with children's health and public safety. Either way, Florida is setting the stage for a major shift in how childhood health protections are handled in the U.S., and the country is watching.