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Health & Wellness NewsCOVID-19 News

Allentown Diocese opposes Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine

COVID-19-vaccine
Photo | Manu Fernandez/AP
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A health worker prepares the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for members of Madrid Emergency Service (SUMMA) in Madrid, Spain on Jan. 12, 2021.

ALLENTOWN, Pa. - Bishop Alfred Schlert said  that the Catholic Church is opposed to this vaccine, claiming it was created with “abortion-derived cell lines.” 

“Other vaccines are available and are more morally acceptable,” Schlert says. 

Johnson & Johnson doesn’t deny using the cells, but also says it doesn’t use fetal tissue.

Schlert is calling on Catholic educators and school employees to seek out other options, like the two-dose Moderna and Pfizer vaccines, which use the cell lines in testing but not in production.

But what are Catholic teachers and school staff to do if this vaccine is their only option? 

“The Johnson & Johnson vaccine can be accepted, but in our area, it’s hard to say there are no other choices,” says a spokesperson for the diocese.

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops has taken a similar stance.