Lisa, IMO one's freedom of religion ends at the other person's nose, even if, or ESPECIALLY if, that other person is a child. No one should have that much power over their children, whether it's life- or health-saving medical care (including mental health care) or PREVENTATIVE medical care such as vaccination. Those children have human rights too, and those rights supersede any claim of parental or religious belief rights of anyone else. What competent adults choose for their own bodies is acceptable (except for vaccination, which is a public health matter), but they have no rights at all to make those decisions for anyone else.