After one of the worst measles outbreaks in recent New York history, state lawmakers are planning on eliminating a religious exemption to vaccine requirements.

The exemption, which allows parents to cite religious beliefs to opt out of vaccines required to enrol in schools, is set to be voted on by the Democrat-led assembly and senate.

This comes after the largest measles outbreak in the last 27 years, which stands at over 1,000 cases.

The outbreak was primarily concentrated in Orthodox Jewish areas in New York.

“We are facing an unprecedented public health crisis,” said state Senator Brad Hoylman, a Manhattan based Democrat and the sponsor of the senate bill.

“The atrocious peddlers of junk science and fraudulent medicine who we know as anti-vaxxers have spent years sowing unwarranted doubt and fear, but it is time for legislators to confront them head on.”

This initiative comes during a time where popular figures, like Jessica Biel and Robert F Kennedy Jr, have expressed concerns regarding tightening vaccination mandates.

The bill is supported by New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat who believes public health is at risk.

The famous faces of the anti-vaccine movement Show all 7 1 /7 The famous faces of the anti-vaccine movement The famous faces of the anti-vaccine movement Charlie Sheen Sheen fought a legal battle against ex-wife Denise Richards to try and block her from vaccinating their children. Richards of course won and Sheen was reportedly so bitter that he paid the paediatrician bill entirely in nickels Getty The famous faces of the anti-vaccine movement Gwyneth Paltrow Paltrow's "health and wellness" company Goop hosted a notorious anti-vaccine speaker at their 2018 Goop Summit Getty The famous faces of the anti-vaccine movement Rob Schneider Schneider demanded the freedom to decline vaccination Getty The famous faces of the anti-vaccine movement Jenny McCarthy McCarthy has claimed that "people are dying from vaccinations", believes that her son caught autism from a vaccine and has pushed her opinions on the topic publicly for many years AFP/Getty The famous faces of the anti-vaccine movement Bill Maher Maher has long spoken against vaccines sating on Larry King live that "a flu shot is the worst thing you can do." His stance appears to stem from a distrust of government AFP/Getty The famous faces of the anti-vaccine movement Alicia Silverstone In Silverstone's book The Kind Mama, she wrote that "there is increasing anecdotal evidence from doctors who have gotten distressed phone calls from parents claiming their child was ‘never the same’ after receiving a vaccine." Getty The famous faces of the anti-vaccine movement Andrew Wakefield Godfather of the anti-vax movement, disgraced doctor Andrew Wakefield famously published a report in the medical journal Lancet claiming a link between the MMR vaccine and autism in 1998. The Lancet retracted the report in 2010 and Wakefield was struck off the medical register PA

“I understand freedom of religion,” he said to the media on Wednesday.

“I have heard the anti-vaxxers’ theory, but I believe both are overwhelmed by the public health risk.”

Some oppose the bill on the basis of religious freedom, but those who support the bill believe that scientific evidence and public health risks should outweigh religious beliefs.

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Supporters have also noted that the Supreme Court of the United States ruled in 1905 that states have the right to enforce compulsory vaccination laws, as reported by AP News.

Others are concerned that some people claiming religious exemptions without any basis in religion, but rather for opposition to vaccines based in debunked myths and discredited rumours.