July 12, 2021 — Now that the COVID-19 vaccines are available for children ages 12 and older, some divorced parents are facing a challenge: What to do when one parent wants the kids to get the COVID-19 vaccine and the other parent doesnтАЩt.
This is the situation facing Michelle Roy-Augustin*, a divorced mom of two sons, ages 12 and 10, who lives in Los Angeles. While her ex-wife wants their 12-year-old-son to get vaccinated right away, Roy-Augustin would rather wait, as some teenagers, albeit rarely, have had heart inflammation after their second dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine, according to the CDC.
тАЬIтАЩd prefer to wait for there to be a larger sample size of kids getting the vaccine to see if there any other problems,тАЭ says Roy-Augustin. She says that she and her ex-wife are vaccinated and that the two have never disagreed about any of the other vaccinations their sons have received throughout their childhood.
тАЬThis is the first time weтАЩve disagreed about something like this. WeтАЩve been remarkably on the same page with most of our co-parenting decisions — until now.тАЭ
Ask divorce attorneys, and theyтАЩll tell you that theyтАЩve litigated plenty of vaccine issues between ex-spouses lately. But the law is clear: Generally speaking, if the parents arenтАЩt divorced or living under an order, either parent can give consent for a child to be vaccinated, says Jennifer S. Hargrave, a divorce attorney at Hargrave Family Law in Dallas.
тАЬHowever, once the parents separate and are living under a parenting order [such as a divorce decree], the order will govern which parent has the rights to decide on a childтАЩs medical care, including тАШinvasive medical proceduresтАЩ such as vaccines, since these puncture the skin,тАЭ she says.
Depending on the agreement, the right to consent to this sort of procedure requires both parents to agree. In other words, if one parent does not agree to it, then the other parent can stop the child from getting the vaccine, Hargrave says.
тАЬThe other parent can ask the court to use their judgment to step in and determine whether the child should have the vaccine,тАЭ she says.
For Roy-Augustin, the to-vaccine-or-not negotiation with her ex-spouse remains ongoing — and stressful.
тАЬI text my ex studies about the side effects of the vaccine, but I doubt she reads them,тАЭ she says. тАЬMy ex operates in a state of constant health anxiety. I think sheтАЩs assuming the schools will mandate the vaccine and then IтАЩll have no choice.тАЭ
Until the COVID-19 vaccine becomes mandatory — if that happens, that is — neither parent should unilaterally sign off on a childтАЩs vaccine without the otherтАЩs consent, says Chantelle A. Porter, a family law attorney at A. Traub & Associates in Lombard, IL.
тАЬItтАЩs best to inform the other parent if you have the sole decision-making responsibility or get consent from your ex-spouse if you have joint decision-making,тАЭ she says.
If you still canтАЩt come to a resolution and you remain in two separate vaccine camps, with neither party even coming close to a concession, you might consider sitting down with your childтАЩs pediatrician or a mediator.
тАЬI believe it helps for both parents to sit down and have a conversation with an expert about the pros and cons of the vaccine,тАЭ Porter says. тАЬItтАЩs also a neutral place where you can raise any concerns you might have.тАЭ
As for Roy-Augustin, sheтАЩs hoping to decide by the fall.
“We now have millions of kids getting their second shot,тАЭ she says. тАЬIf there arenтАЩt any problems by October, then I will consider it — but maybe the J&J and not two shots?тАЭ
Three Ways to Bridge the COVID-19 Vaccine Gap
If you and your spouse just canтАЩt decide whether or not to have your child vaccinated against COVID-19, you should find a way to discuss this maturely, because this issue isnтАЩt going to disappear overnight, says Elizabeth Cohen, PhD, a clinical psychologist in private practice in New York City and author of Light on the Other Side of Divorce.
Below, Cohen, also the self-described тАЬDivorce Doctor,тАЭ suggests three ways to best communicate about this:
1: Separate your feelings for your ex from your co-parenting responsibilities
In fact, your goal should be to rethink the entire way youтАЩre talking to your ex, Cohen says. тАЬAsk yourself: тАШIf I was negotiating with a business partner, how would I approach this situation?тАЩтАЭ she suggests. тАЬYes, your ex is someone you have likely had a long history of not feeling heard. And, yes, this is playing into your conversations with your ex, but you have to put those feelings aside for the sake of resolving this.тАЭ
2: Stay factual
Avoid saying things like, тАЬтАШYou alwaysтАЩ or тАШYou never cared about the kidsтАЩ medical stuff before, why do you care now?тАЩтАЭ Cohen suggests.
тАЬInstead, be very clear about why you feel like this is the right decision,тАЭ she says. тАЬAgain, explain it as if you were talking to a neutral person and take any emotional language out of the discussion.тАЭ
3: Respect your exтАЩs point of view
It can be very challenging, but itтАЩs very important to come from a place of respect for the other personтАЩs opinion, Cohen says.
тАЬRemember, your ex feels just as strongly about this as you do,тАЭ she says. тАЬAsk him or her to explain how they came to their decision. Remember: Your underlying anger and resentment towards this person has nothing to do with whether your child should get the vaccine — or not.тАЭ
*Name has been changed for privacy purposes
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