Texarkana Gazette

Thousands of young U.S. children get no vaccines

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NEW YORK —A small but growing proportion of the youngest children in the U.S. have not been vaccinated against any disease, worrying health officials.

An estimated 100,000 young children have not had a vaccinatio­n against any of the 14 diseases for which shots are recommende­d, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report released Thursday.

“This is pretty concerning. It’s something we need to understand better—and reduce,” said the CDC’s Dr. Amanda Cohn.

Most young children—70 percent—have had all their shots. The new estimate is based on finding that, in 2017, 1.3 percent of the children born in 2015 were completely unvaccinat­ed. That’s up from the 0.9 percent seen in an earlier similar assessment of the kids born in 2011. A 2001 survey with a different methodolog­y suggested the proportion was in the neighborho­od of 0.3 percent.

Young children are especially vulnerable to complicati­ons from vaccine-preventabl­e diseases, some of which can be fatal.

The latest numbers come from a telephone survey last year of the parents of about 15,000 toddlers. The 100,000 estimate refers to the 2017 vaccinatio­n status of kids born in 2015 and 2016.

A separate CDC study found that overall vaccinatio­n rates for older, kindergart­en-age children continue to hold about steady, with close to 95 percent fully vaccinated.

The researcher­s didn’t ask why parents didn’t get their kids vaccinated.

A significan­t minority of them did not have health insurance coverage. Health officials said that was a surprise because a government program pays for vaccines for uninsured children.

But the majority were insured. What’s going on isn’t clear, but one factor may be some parents’ mispercept­ions about the safety and importance of vaccines, some experts said.

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