The Denver Post

SOME VACCINE USE TRENDING DOWN

- By Neil Vigdor

U. S. children are on pace this year to miss 9 million doses for measles, polio and other highly contagious diseases.

Children in the United States are on pace this year to miss 9 million vaccine doses for measles, polio and other highly contagious diseases, according to medical claims data — a disruption that health care authoritie­s called alarming and attributed to the pandemic.

The data was made public Wednesday by the Blue Cross Blue Shield Associatio­n, one of the nation’s largest federation­s of insurance companies, which said routine childhood vaccinatio­ns had declined by as much as 26%, compared with 2019.

The findings emerged fewer than two weeks after the World Health Organizati­on and UNICEF warned that progress vaccinatin­g children from polio and measles was being threatened by the pandemic. In an emergency call to action, the two organizati­ons said that the risk of measles and polio outbreaks was on the rise.

And just last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the WHO reported that measles deaths worldwide had soared to their highest level in 23 years in 2019 and were 50% higher than just three years earlier.

Dr. Megan Ranney, an emergency physician at Brown University in Rhode Island who specialize­s in public health research, said that failure to maintain childhood vaccine rates could compromise what is known as herd immunity. The term refers to the point at which a disease stops spreading because nearly everyone in a population has become immune to it.

“We know that once you fall below herd immunity, it offers a foothold for these deadly childhood diseases to once again rear their head in our communitie­s,” Ranney said in an interview.

Blue Cross Blue Shield said that 40% of parents and legal guardians whom it had surveyed said that their children missed their vaccinatio­ns because of the pandemic. The majority of missed appointmen­ts occurred from March through May, at the beginning of the pandemic, and in August, which is when many children typically get vaccinated before school resumes, the associatio­n said.

Representa­tives for Blue Cross, which provides health insurance to about 109 million Americans, said that it was critical to raise awareness about the safeguards that health care profession­als have put in place to prevent the coronaviru­s from spreading.

“The pediatrici­ans’ offices are being careful, not only for the patients, but the ( employees) who work there,” Maureen Sullivan, the chief strategy and innovation officer for the Blue Cross Blue Shield Associatio­n, said. “At this point, it is safe.”

Sullivan said that the United States was “perilously close” to falling below the herd immunity threshold for polio. According to the Blue Cross data, the vaccine rates for measles and the whooping cough, or pertussis, for 2020 were expected to fall below the thresholds for herd immunity set by public health authoritie­s.

“That is a primary reason we wanted to come out with this data quickly,” Sullivan said.

Ranney, who was not associated with the Blue Cross study, noted that there were measles outbreaks last year in California and in a New York suburb, where the spread had been traced to ultra- Orthodox families whose children had not been vaccinated.

“It would be a horrible irony for us to get through this pandemic and lose children to these preventabl­e diseases,” she said.

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