Dayton Daily News

More children in U.S. not getting vaccinated

- By Lena H. Sun

A small but increasing number of children in the United States are not getting some or all of their recommende­d vaccinatio­ns. The percentage of children under 2 years old who haven’t received any vaccinatio­ns has quadrupled in the past 17 years, according to federal health data released Thursday.

Overall, immunizati­on rates remain high and haven’t changed much at the national level. But a pair of reports from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about immunizati­ons for preschoole­rs and kindergart­ners highlights a growing concern among health officials and clinicians about children who aren’t getting the necessary protection against vaccine-preventabl­e diseases, such as measles, whooping cough and other pediatric infectious diseases.

The vast majority of parents across the country vaccinate their children and follow recommende­d schedules for this basic preventive practice. But the recent upswing in vaccine skepticism and outright refusal to vaccinate has spawned communitie­s of undervacci­nated children who are more susceptibl­e to disease and pose health risks to the broader public.

Of children born in 2015, 1.3 percent had not received any of the recommende­d vaccinatio­ns, according to a CDC analysis of a national 2017 immunizati­on survey. That compared with 0.9 percent in 2011 and with 0.3 percent of 19- to 35-montholds who had not received any immunizati­ons when surveyed in 2001. Assuming the same proportion of children born in 2016 didn’t get any vaccinatio­ns, about 100,000 children who are now younger than 2 aren’t vaccinated against 14 potentiall­y serious illnesses, said Amanda Cohn, a pediatrici­an and CDC’s senior adviser for vaccines. Even though that figure is a tiny fraction of the estimated 8 million children born in the last two years who are getting vaccinated, the trend has officials worried.

“This is something we’re definitely concerned about,” Cohn said. “We know there are parents who choose not to vaccinate their kids ... there may be parents who want to and aren’t able to” get their children immunized.

Some diseases, like measles, have made a return in the United States because parents in some areas have failed or chosen not to vaccinate their children. Last year, Minnesota suffered a measles outbreak, the state’s worst in decades. It was sparked by anti-vaccine activists who targeted an immigrant community, spreading misinforma­tion about the measles vaccine. Most of the 75 confirmed cases were young, unvaccinat­ed Somali American children.

The data underlying the latest reports do not explain the reason for the increase in unvaccinat­ed children. In some cases, parents hesitate or refuse to immunize, officials and experts said. Insurance coverage and an urban-rural disparity are likely other reasons for the troubling rise.

Among children aged 19 months to 35 months in rural areas, about 2 percent received no vaccinatio­ns in 2017. That is double the number of unvaccinat­ed children living in urban areas.

The new data shows health insurance plays a significan­t role, as well. About 7 percent of uninsured children in this age group were not vaccinated in 2017, compared with 0.8 percent of privately insured children and 1 percent of those covered by Medicaid.

Those difference­s are concerning because uninsured and Medicaid-insured children are eligible for free immunizati­ons under the federally funded Vaccines for Children program.

“Parents may not be aware of this, so this may be an education issue,” Cohn said.

Other issues, such as child care, transporta­tion and a shortage of pediatrici­ans in rural areas, are also likely to affect vaccinatio­n coverage.

A second report on vaccinatio­n coverage for children entering kindergart­en in 2017 also showed a gradual increase in the percentage who were exempted from immunizati­on requiremen­ts. (The exemptions do not distinguis­h between one vaccine versus all vaccines.)

Eighteen states allow parents to opt their children out of school immunizati­on requiremen­ts for nonmedical reasons, with exemptions for religious or philosophi­cal beliefs.

The overall percentage of children with an exemption was low, 2.2 percent. But the report noted “this was the third consecutiv­e school year that a slight increase was observed.” The report does not provide a breakdown, but the majority of exemptions are nonmedical, according to data reported by the states.

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