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FILE - In this March 13, 2019 file photo, mothers Ariana Rawls, left, of Stratford, Conn., and Shannon Gamache, right, of Ashford, Conn., opponents to ending the religious exemption from the state's school vaccination requirements, talk to reporters at the Capitol, in Hartford, Conn. The debate whether Connecticut lawmakers should scrap the religious exemption could end up sinking efforts to make the flu vaccine more accessible to children. A bill that would allow trained pharmacists to administer the flu vaccine to children 12 years and older cleared the General Assembly's Public Health Committee, but later died on the Senate calendar due to inaction. (AP Photo/Susan Haigh, File)

FILE - In this March 13, 2019 file photo, mothers Ariana Rawls, left, of Stratford, Conn., and Shannon Gamache, right, of Ashford, Conn., opponents to ending the religious exemption from the state's school vaccination requirements, talk to reporters at the Capitol, in Hartford, Conn. The debate whether Connecticut lawmakers should scrap the religious exemption could end up sinking efforts to make the flu vaccine more accessible to children. A bill that would allow trained pharmacists to administer the flu vaccine to children 12 years and older cleared the General Assembly's Public Health Committee, but later died on the Senate calendar due to inaction. (AP Photo/Susan Haigh, File)

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