Miami Herald

3% of students are unvaccinat­ed at Weston school with measles cases, Broward superinten­dent says

- BY JIMENA TAVEL jtavel@miamiheral­d.com

percent of the students at a Weston elementary school with a measles outbreak are unvaccinat­ed, said Broward County Public Schools Superinten­dent Peter Licata during a Broward School Board meeting Wednesday.

Licata told board members that 33 out of the 1,067 students at the K-5 Manatee Bay Elementary don’t have the measlesmum­ps-rubella vaccine, known as the MMR vacal” cine, for “various reasons” that he didn’t mention.

The MMR vaccine is mandatory to attend all public and private childcare and K-12 schools in Florida, but some students might be eligible for medical or religious exemptions.

Since last Friday, Florida Department of Health officials in Broward County have identified six cases of the highly contagious disease at the school at 19200 Manatee Isles Drive in Weston.

Since then, health officials have offered “severThree opportunit­ies to get the vaccine, Licata said. On Wednesday, officials visited the school and planned to stay until 6 p.m. offering to vaccinate school employees, students with parental consent, and their families, he said.

The vaccine is the best protection against the cold-like sickness, according to state health officials, who say it’s more than 98% effective in preventing infection.

The school’s 97% vaccinated population is higher than the state average.

Overall, Florida reports an about 91% rate of vaccinatio­n against measles, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Immunizati­on data for the 2023-2024 school year wasn’t immediatel­y available. But in the 2021-2022 school year, about 92% of public and private kindergart­en students in Broward and Miami-Dade met the immunizati­on requiremen­ts, state data shows.

The superinten­dent visited the Weston school this week and said it was “operating normally” despite “several” student and employee absences.

“The children were learning,” he said. “I thanked the principal and the staff for continuing to educate our children during this time.”

SCHOOL DISTRICT RESPONDING TO LADAPO’S DECISIONS

Licata also said on Wednesday that in a memo issued Tuesday, Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo allowed any Manatee Bay student to stay home for up to 21 days because of the outbreak, so the district is working to provide that.

“We are in the process of developing how to ensure there’s continuous learning for families who exercise this option. This will not be virtual learning but will offer a bridge during the 21-day period,” Licata said.

In his memo, Ladapo wrote: “When measles is detected in a school, it is normally recommende­d that individual­s without history of prior infection or vaccinatio­n stay home for up to 21 days. This is the period of time that the virus can be transmitte­d.”

“Because of the high likelihood of infection, it is normally recommende­d that children stay home until the end of the infectious period, which is currently March 7, 2024. As the epidemiolo­gical investigat­ion continues, this date could change,” he added.

Ladapo said that for now, state officials will allow parents to decide whether to send their kids to school, but that could change if more cases come up.

Measles can be transmitte­d four days prior to the start of symptoms, which include a rash that often develops on the face and neck before spreading to the rest of the body, a high fever, cough, runny nose and red watery eyes.

Ladapo advised all children with symptoms to avoid going to school until they fully subside without medication.

To prevent further infections of the airborne disease, Licata said the school district deepcleane­d and changed the air filters at the school campus and the buses in which the students traveled.

In the last decade, Florida has seen 40 confirmed cases of measles, which was was largely eliminated in the U.S. in 2000 following a strong vaccinatio­n program, the Miami Herald reported.

Jimena Tavel: 786-442-8014, @jimenamtb

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