Sun.Star Pampanga

Vaccine rates rise on long-wary ‘hippie’ island near Seattle

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VASHON ISLAND, Wash. (AP) — Sarah Day is a school nurse with “street cred” when it comes to the polarizing issue of vaccines on an idyllic island in Washington state known for its rural beauty, countercul­ture lifestyle and low immunizati­on rates.

Since she began communal living on Vashon Island more than 20 years ago, the registered nurse has been advocating for getting kids their shots against a loud contingent of anti-vaccine parents in the closeknit community of about 11,000 that’s accessible only by ferry, a serene 20minute ride from Seattle.

And it may now be working, thanks to a “perfect storm” of changes being felt on the island, Day said.

The Vashon Island School District has seen a significan­t increase in fully immunized children. The number of kindergart­ners who received the required set of statemanda­ted vaccines jumped by 31% in the past six years, from 56% to nearly 74% in the 2017-18 school year, according to the King County Public Health Department.

Amid the nation’s largest measles outbreak in 25 years, provaccine advocates are cheering this apparent shift that challenges Vashon’s reputation as a hotbed of highly educated, anti-establishm­ent parents who choose not to vaccinate their children from preventabl­e and potentiall­y devastatin­g d i seases.

“We’ve been the poster children for the anti-vaccine or vaccinehes­itancy movement for so long,” Day said.

She attributes the rising numbers to increasing­ly visible provaccine informatio­n, expanded access to shots and media coverage of measles outbreaks in the Pacific Northwest and New York this year.

The island town with deep roots in organic farming has long drawn those who want to escape urban sprawl and others wary of putting chemicals in their bodies, whether in their food or medical care. Kids run barefoot through untamed forests and families still raise fruits and vegetables without pesticides to share over meals in communal houses.

Today, it also has its share of city commuters, tourists and million-dollar vacation homes with sweeping views of Mount Rainier, as well as locals pushing the science that vaccines are safe.

While the gains are notable, the Vashon school district still has one of the lowest vaccine rates in the U.S. It is far below the 95 percent target that a majority of schools across the country hover around and is needed for herd immunity, which protects those who haven’t been vaccinated for medical reasons or because they are too young.

The majority of Vashon parents say yes to some vaccines, particular­ly the tetanus shot for their kids who play outside on the forested island. But many still buck the formal schedule of shots recommende­d by health officials. They may select some but not all and space them out over a longer period of time.

Nicky Wilks, who grew up on Vashon and has three young children, said the changing attitude has led some pro-vaccine parents to exclude from gatherings kids who may not have their shots, while teenagers openly mock those who aren’t vaccinated.

“That’s the worstcase scenario, when we are creating physical barriers in our community,” Wilks said.

He declined to say if his family is fully immunized but said he doesn’t agree that dozens of shots starting at birth are necessary despite health officials’ insistence.

Gator Lanphear says he’s “very judgmental” about parents who don’t vaccinate. He said he not only immunizes his twin 6year-old daughters but instills in them the importance of getting their shots as a heroic act .

“They understand that what they did benefits humankind. Yeah, they got their ice cream for it, but they’re also eradicatin­g polio,” Lanphear said.

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