Daily Times (Primos, PA)

New rules: No shots, no school WHEN DO KIDS NEED THE VACCINES?

Students will be sent home if immunizati­ons are not up to date

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The Associated Press

The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health wants students to get vaccinated much sooner than previously required.

State officials want both public and private school students to be up-to-date with all their vaccinatio­ns within five days of the beginning of the school year, a drastic reduction from the eight months that pupils used to have to get their shots.

The measure is intended to prevent the spread of vaccine-preventabl­e diseases, such as last year’s whooping cough outbreak where residents in two central Pennsylvan­ia counties became ill with the bacterial respirator­y disease.

In response, health officials offered free immunizati­on shots after the reported 29 cases of pertussis in Cumberland and Franklin counties in 2016.

Dr. Lee H. Harrison, an epidemiolo­gy professor at the University of Pittsburgh, says outbreaks of infectious diseases have demonstrat­ed the need for high immunizati­on rates.

A closer look at the new rules:

Pennsylvan­ia students need to have all their immunity vaccines within five days after the beginning of the school year. Previously, students had eight months to get their shots.

Pupils could get around the five-day requiremen­t if they have a medical certificat­e on or before the fifth day of school that shows a schedule of when they will get their vaccines, said April Hutcheson, spokeswoma­n for the state health department.

WHAT IF I DON’T WANT MY CHILD TO BE VACCINATED?

A student could be exempt from vaccinatio­n if they can show a medical, religious, moral, ethical or philosophi­cal reason for abstaining. Hutcheson did not elaborate on how students would prove such an exemption, though she did say that students who prove an exemption might be excluded from school if a vaccine-preventabl­e disease breaks out.

The immunizati­ons could also be waived if a child is homeless, if they transferre­d into the school or if there is a national vaccine shortage.

HOW DID THESE NEW RULES COME ABOUT?

The health department spokeswoma­n said the new regulation­s were developed over a nearly two-year process that included serval public comment phases that drew nearly 300 recommenda­tions from parents, school nurses and physicians.

The updated requiremen­ts bring Pennsylvan­ia in line with recommenda­tions set by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s committee on immunizati­on practices.

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