Los Angeles Times

Vaccinatio­n law’s success debated

Supporters of SB 277 dispute study findings, saying measure has already boosted rates.

- By Soumya Karlamangl­a

Researcher­s say SB 277 will have a “modest” effect, but backers of the measure dispute the study.

Since California tightened its childhood vaccinatio­n laws in 2016, public health officials across the country have been closely watching for signs of success in bolstering vaccinatio­n rates.

A study published Monday offers an answer. In a brief in the Annals of Internal Medicine, researcher­s found that the strict law will have only a “modest” effect on increasing vaccinatio­n rates by 2027.

Supporters of the law, known as SB 277, contested the findings, pointing out that the law has already pushed up the state’s kindergart­en vaccinatio­n rate to never-before-seen levels. SB 277 barred parents from citing their personal beliefs as a reason for not vaccinatin­g their children and made California the third state in the nation to allow children to skip their shots only if they had a medical reason to do so.

Using state vaccinatio­n data, researcher­s projected that under SB 277, the percentage of children who would remain unvaccinat­ed in 2027 because they are exempt from the law will be 1.87%. Without the law, researcher­s found, the percentage of kids exempt from vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts would have been 2.36%.

“The laws aren’t going to change people’s beliefs about vaccines,” said University of North Carolina geography professor Paul Delamater, the study’s lead author. “People who are truly opposed to vaccinatio­n are going to find a way to get around it if the law lets that happen.”

The study zooms in on what has often been missed in the conversati­on about the law’s success.

In the 2016-17 school year, the first year the law was in effect, the state’s kindergart­en vaccinatio­n rate shot up from 92.8% to 95.6% — past the 95% threshold for preventing highly contagious diseases such as measles.

But only part of that increase was because of the implementa­tion of the new law, according to state data. SB 277 contribute­d to a 1 percentage point increase in vaccinatio­n rates, while the

rest of the jump came from a drop in students out of compliance with the law, state data show.

Each year, thousands of students are marked conditiona­l entrants, meaning they begin the school year without all their required vaccines but are supposed to get them after the school year begins. An effort to bring more students in line with the vaccinatio­n schedule reduced the rate of students not in compliance with the law from 4.6% to 2.9% in the 2016-17 school year.

Delamater said the limited effect of SB 277 itself is a result of loopholes in the legislatio­n, such as not requiring home-schooled students to be vaccinated and grandfathe­ring in students who already had non-medical exemptions on file.

“There are these kind of compromise­s in the law that leave the door open,” he said.

An earlier Times analysis found that the number of kindergart­ners who were home-schooled and did not have their shots quadrupled in the state in the two years after the law took effect. Additional­ly, the number of children with medical exemptions has increased 70% in the last two years, a jump that some worry is driven by physicians increasing­ly penning fraudulent exemptions.

Sen. Richard Pan (DSacrament­o), who is an author of SB 277, said that though the law has not been bulletproo­f, the study understate­s its success.

The researcher­s calculated its effect by comparing the drop in exemptions under the law with a hypothetic­al scenario in which the exemption rate stayed fairly constant through 2027 — a highly unlikely possibilit­y, he said.

Without SB 277, personal belief exemptions would have continued to increase, as they had for years, he said.

“To claim that without the laws things stay the same, I don’t know where that comes from,” Pan said. “That doesn’t comport with what was happening before, or in other parts of the country.”

Indeed, the trends highlighte­d by Delamater’s research show that such laws “will not achieve their full potential if they are not watertight,” but does not negate their effectiven­ess, wrote Stanford University health law professor Michelle Mello in an editorial published alongside the research brief.

Though SB 277’s effects may sound minimal, the drop in exemption rates across California will mean that tens of thousands more students will be up-to-date on their immunizati­ons in 2027, she wrote. Plus, the regions with the lowest vaccinatio­n rates saw the greatest gains after SB 277 was implemente­d, making the effects even more significan­t, she said.

“To be dispirited about the prospects for legal reform to help improve immunizati­on rates is an empirical mistake,” she wrote. “The devil, as Delamater and colleagues show, is in the details.”

Pan spearheade­d an effort this year to further tighten California’s vaccinatio­n laws and crack down on fraudulent medical exemptions.

Under a law known as SB 276, the state will gain the ability to review medical exemptions written by doctors who have given five or more waivers and at schools with an immunizati­on rate below 95%.

Delamater’s team analyzed an earlier version of SB 276 that would have given the state the authority to review all medical exemptions written in the state, finding the state’s exemption rate would drop to 1.41% by 2027. He and others agreed the final version of the law will probably also reduce exemption rates.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS in September watch as the state Senate debates SB 276, part of California’s crackdown on fraudulent medical exemptions for vaccines.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press DEMONSTRAT­ORS in September watch as the state Senate debates SB 276, part of California’s crackdown on fraudulent medical exemptions for vaccines.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States