A controversial anti-vaccination group is encouraging people to sign up to a fake church because it may help them bypass Australia's emerging "no jab, no play" childcare laws.

Under the NSW government's 2013 law and the Victorian government's proposed law due to start in 2016, children who are not fully immunised are unable to enrol in childcare unless their parents declare they have a medical reason or personal, philosophical or religious objection.

To document a conscientious objection, parents must take a Medicare form to a GP to receive counselling about the risks and benefits of immunisation. The doctor can then be asked to sign the form, which must be sent to the federal government's department of human services.

The same form is required for families wanting to claim the Family Tax Benefit A, which is designed to assist with the cost of raising children.

But with some doctors refusing to sign the documents, the Australian Vaccination Skeptics Network Inc (formerly known as the Australian Vaccination Network), is spruiking the "Church of Conscious Living" as a religion that is opposed to vaccination.