Houston Chronicle

Unvaccinat­ed kids on the rise

Number of Texas children exempted for non-medical reasons increased 19-fold since 2003 — to 45,000

- By Todd Ackerman

The number of Texans who exempt their children from vaccinatio­n for non-medical reasons rose nearly 9 percent last school year, continuing a now 12-year-long trend that public health officials worry could eventually leave communitie­s vulnerable to outbreaks of preventabl­e diseases.

The new numbers represent a 19-fold increase since 2003, the first year that Texas law allowed parents to decline state immunizati­on requiremen­ts for “reasons of conscience.” The number of such exemptions are still small, a little under 45,000 of the state’s roughly 5.5 million schoolchil­dren, but they’ve spiked from less than 3,000 that first year, according to the new state data.

“The trend is going in the wrong direction,” said Anna C. Dragsbaek, president and CEO of The Immunizati­on Partnershi­p, a pro-vaccine group. “It’s time for the community to step up and take action on this very troubling trend.”

Concern has picked up in recent years amid the reemergenc­e of diseases such as measles and whooping cough. A large measles outbreak last year, linked to an initial exposure at Disneyland in California, sparked particular distress.

Texas is one of 18 states

that allows waivers of school vaccine requiremen­ts based on parents’ conscience or personal beliefs. Only two states — Mississipp­i and West Virginia — don’t grant exemptions from immunizati­on requiremen­ts on religious grounds, and all states allow exemptions for medical conditions, such as a compromise­d immune system.

9 million lives saved

Opponents say they are simply doing what they think is best for their child by avoiding vaccines. They argue that the assortment of shots — Texas children are required to receive 11 immunizati­ons to attend school — are dangerous to developing bodies.

“Do you want to trade a possible acute, fully recoverabl­e normal childhood illness for the probabilit­y of an adverse vaccine reaction and a lifetime of chronic, debilitati­ng, painful conditions that your child may never fully recover from?” asks Cypress resident Michelle Guppy, who blames vaccines for her now 22-year-old son’s autism. “If I had known all the ingredient­s in vaccines, how neurotoxic they are, I would have never signed a consent form.”

Public health officials emphasize that vaccines are safe, that the theory they cause autism has been discredite­d. They credit vaccines with bringing seven major infectious conditions under some degree of control — smallpox, tetanus, diphtheria, yellow fever, whooping cough, polio and measles — and saving an estimated 9 million lives worldwide each year.

The overall number of conscienti­ous objectors isn’t yet high enough to threaten herd immunity, the idea that vaccinatio­n of a significan­t portion of a population provides a measure of protection for those individual­s without immunity to a contagious disease.

But Dragsbaek and public health officials fear clusters of “anti-vaxxers” could leave many children vulnerable, particular­ly those with medical conditions that prevent vaccinatio­n and those too young to be vaccinated.

Pushed by the Immunizati­on Partnershi­p, the 2015 Legislatur­e considered a bill that would have required the Texas Department of State Health Services to post the exemption numbers of every school on its website.

Delinquenc­y rate

Under the current law, the department is only required to post aggregate numbers for each school district.

The bill passed the House but died in the Senate. Dragsbaek, impressed at the traction the legislatio­n got, said the partnershi­p will push hard on behalf of any such bill again in 2017.

The bill to require school-specific informatio­n called for the inclu- sion of delinquenc­y numbers, also a big problem. At HISD, for instance, more than 3 percent of children in 2015-2016 — who hadn’t obtained a conscienti­ous exemption — had not received at least one of each vaccine by the district’s age-specified deadline. Enforcemen­t of such deadlines is up to the principal.

“Eleven percent of HISD’s prekinderg­arten students hadn’t received their first dose of measles vaccine 90 days into the school year,” said Dr. Susan Wootton, a pediatrici­an at University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston who is leading an HISD task force on immunizati­on delinquenc­y. “That needs to be fixed. Nepal does better than that.”

Harris County’s overall conscienti­ous exemption rate is still relatively low, just 0.62 percent, but it’s doubled in the last five years. So has Montgomery County’s, now 1.73 percent. Brazoria County has gone from 0.30 to 0.80. Gaines County in West Texas has the state’s highest conscienti­ous exemption rate, nearly 5 percent.

‘Danger to children’

Increasing exemptions are occurring nationally as well as in Texas. Following last year’s measles outbreak that began at Disneyland, California took action, barring religious and other personal-belief exemptions. The Disneyland outbreak was thought to account for much of 2015’s 189 measles cases in 24 states, which was actually down from 2014’s 667 cases in 27 states. Measles had been considered eradicated in 2000.

A 2015 Texas bill to eliminate the state’s conscienti­ous exemption never got a hearing.

Barbara Loe Fisher, president of the pro-exemption National Vaccine Informatio­n Center, expresses skepticism about links between those not vaccinated and recent cases of measles and whooping cough. She said Texas has one of the highest student vaccinatio­n rates of all states and said its vaccine laws “strike an appropriat­e balance between achieving public health goals and protecting both vaccine vulnerable individual­s and basic human rights.”

Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’s Hospital, responded that Texas’ vaccinatio­n rates among preschool-age children, 19 months to 35 months, rank 48th in the nation. He said that Fisher’s group “promotes policies that represent a danger to children.”

“The bottom line that is that children in the state of Texas are now at great risk for measles and other killer childhood infections,” Hotez said. “This is happening because parents are choosing not to vaccinate their kids and are doing so because of erroneous beliefs.”

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