Houston Chronicle Sunday

Area measles cases reveal that thousands of Texas children are not immunized.

Tens of thousands of Texas children aren’t immunized.

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Texans can’t afford to ignore the warning signs of a potential public health calamity that doesn’t have to happen. They should be alarmed that five measles cases were reported last week; three in Harris County and one each in Galveston and Montgomery counties. They need to remember that six measles cases were also reported in January 2018 in Ellis County, south of Dallas.

Measles supposedly was eradicated in the United States years ago, but it’s still around. The disease kills more than 100,000 people a year worldwide; most of them children who were not immunized. That should worry Texans, especially parents, because any one of tens of thousands of schoolchil­dren who received waivers not to take the shots your child had to take could one day become a walking infection factory.

If that happens, blame the Texas Legislatur­e for bowing down to a misinforme­d anti-vaccine group by passing a 2003 law that made it easier to exempt children from getting school shots.

Texas had allowed medical and religious waivers since 1972, but the 2003 law allowed exemptions for “reasons of conscience.” Anyone can get an exemption. All you have to do is fill out a form, get it notarized and send it back to the state. Consequent­ly, the number of waivers in Texas has soared from 2,314 in the 2003-04 school year to 56,738 in 2017-18 — and that number is expected to grow.

Too many parents are listening to anti-vaccine activists preaching the falsehood that childhood immunizati­ons may cause autism or other disorders. Researcher­s have proved that theory wrong, but it has become the credo of a group called Texans for Vaccine Choice, which insists it’s only standing up for parental rights.

That message resonates among devoutly independen­t Texans. With that in mind, conservati­ve legislator­s coveting the TVC’s backing have prevented any bill from passing that would make it harder to get an immunizati­on waiver. “It’s become a litmus test for conservati­ves,” said State Rep. Sarah Davis, R-Houston, who supported four immunizati­on bills that died in the 2017 legislativ­e session. She said vaccine proponents this session may need to play defense to prevent waivers from being extended to child care centers.

Davis pointed out that it took a meningitis outbreak that caused a Texas A&M student’s death and the amputation of a University of Texas at Austin student’s fingers and legs before the legislatur­e passed a 2011 law making it mandatory for college students to have a meningitis vaccinatio­n. “I hope it doesn’t take that now,” Davis said.

It could if members of the legislatur­e’s Freedom Caucus continue cozying up to TVC, which has become a powerful political force despite making meager campaign donations. The group makes up for its lack of cash by mobilizing grassroots support to block-walk, man phone banks and leave online messages on behalf of favored candidates like State Rep. Jonathan Strickland, R-Bedford.

“The state of Texas doesn’t own our kids,” said Strickland at a TVC rally. “They should be looking for ways to protect parents because we know what’s best for our kids.” What Bedford and other TVC-endorsed legislator­s ignore is that childhood immunizati­on laws protect the public’s health, which of necessity must at times be regarded as a higher priority.

If the politician­s are genuinely concerned about parental rights, what about a parent’s right to know the percentage of immunizati­on waivers at her child’s school? Doesn’t that parent have a right to know which schools pose a greater risk of her child contractin­g measles? Unfortunat­ely, commonsens­e legislatio­n that would have required schools to report their percentage of students with waivers, but not their identities, didn’t pass in 2017.

All 50 states require some childhood vaccinatio­ns and most allow medical and religious waivers, but Texas is one of only 17 states that hand out philosophi­cal waivers. California, Mississipp­i and West Virginia only allow medical exemptions. Washington state may join them after a measles outbreak in January that saw more than 50 confirmed cases.

California stopped granting waivers for philosophi­cal or personal reasons in 2015 after a measles outbreak that began at Disneyland infected 125 people. It shouldn’t take an emergency on that scale to get the Texas Legislatur­e to act.

It won’t if Texans tell their legislator­s so stop listening to the small number people in TVC and start listening to the millions of parents who want to send their children to school without worrying about them coming home with a communicab­le disease. It’s time for the politician­s to put public health before self-interest.

Anyone in Texas can get a waiver so their child doesn’t have to get shots to attend school. All you have to do is fill out a form, get it notarized and send it back to the state. Consequent­ly, the number of immunizati­on waivers in Texas has soared from 2,314 in the 2003-04 school year to 56,738 in 2017-18.

 ?? Owen Humphreys / Associated Press ?? The World Health Organizati­on has said the number of people contractin­g measles in 2018 across Europe was the highest in a decade.
Owen Humphreys / Associated Press The World Health Organizati­on has said the number of people contractin­g measles in 2018 across Europe was the highest in a decade.
 ?? Staff graphic Source: Texas Department of State Health Services ??
Staff graphic Source: Texas Department of State Health Services

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