San Antonio Express-News

Abbott bars mandatory student vaccines

Move comes despite CDC’S recommenda­tion

- By Meghan Mangrum

Texas schools can’t require students to receive the COVID-19 vaccine despite a new recommenda­tion from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Gov. Greg Abbott told Texas Education Commission­er Mike Morath and school superinten­dents that the vaccine — recently added to the CDC’S list of recommende­d childhood immunizati­ons — cannot be mandated for students to attend school.

“Despite attempts at federal overreach into the health care decisions of Americans, in Texas we continue to honor and defend the freedom of parents to choose what is best for the health and well-being of their families,” Abbott wrote in a letter to school officials. “Regardless of what the CDC may suggest, in Texas, the COVID-19 vaccine remains voluntary. Texas schools shall not require students to receive the COVID-19 vaccine for any reason.”

In August 2021, Abbott issued an executive order prohibitin­g vaccine mandates by government entities in Texas, which also allows parents to opt out of the COVID-19 vaccine for their children.

Last month, after a CDC panel first moved to recommend the vaccine for children, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton joined 13 other state attorneys general and urged the committee to not add the vaccine to its list of recommende­d childhood immunizati­ons.

The panel’s decision, which has since been adopted by the CDC director, formally adds the shot to a list often used by schools and health officials in making vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts.

But in a letter addressed to the CDC’S advisory committee and its director, the attorneys general argued that “children are at little risk of death from COVID-19” and that little is known about the vaccine’s effectiven­ess.

Requiring COVID-19 vaccines for children could “undoubtedl­y accelerate a rejection by many American families of more traditiona­l vaccinatio­ns due to the CDC’S increasing­ly sullied credibilit­y,” the letter read.

Each state has the authority to set vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts for its schoolchil­dren as well as opt-out provisions. Texas officials made it clear throughout the pandemic that COVID-19 vaccine mandates would be unlikely.

In October 2021, Gov. Greg Abbott also issued an executive order cracking down on such mandates and banning any entity in Texas, including private businesses, from requiring vaccinatio­ns for employees or customers.

Abbott had called on lawmakers to pass a bill with the same effect during a special legislativ­e session last year. After it failed to pass in the Legislatur­e, Republican­s instead challenged federal vaccine requiremen­ts in court.

Required vaccines

Prior to starting kindergart­en, Texas students must receive multiple vaccines under state law. The Texas Department of Health and Human Services requires students to be fully immunized against diphtheria, tetanus, polio, measles, mumps and rubella, hepatitis A and chickenpox.

Boosters and additional vaccines, such as hepatitis B and the meningococ­cal, or meningitis, vaccines are also required as students age.

But Texas law allows for medical, religious or “reasons of conscience” exemptions.

Every year, school districts hustle to ensure students’ vaccinatio­n records are up to date in time for the start of the school year. Exemptions must be documented.

Getting vaccinated

Some have worried that increasing pressure from families over “parental rights” would lead to an uptick in students requesting exemptions, especially as immunizati­on rates nationwide dipped during the pandemic.

A September 2020 state report on the Texas Vaccines for Children program, which provides low-cost vaccines to eligible children, outlined steep declines in immunizati­ons.

More recent data from the Department of Health and Human Services indicate that about 93 percent of Texas kindergart­eners were up to date on required immunizati­ons during the 2021-22 school year.

Still, those seeking religious exemptions climbed about half a percentage point with some school districts in San Antonio, near Austin, in North Texas suburbs and Amarillo reporting more than 3 percent of students seeking such exemptions.

Regardless of whether the COVID-19 vaccinatio­n is required, nearly 50 percent of parents are willing to get the COVID-19 vaccine for their children, according to an August poll from the Dallas Morning News and the University of Texas at Tyler.

As of Oct. 25, about 2.6 million Texas children ages 6 months to 15 years old have received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose, according to state data.

The DMN Education Lab is a community-funded journalism initiative. The Dallas Morning News retains full editorial control of the Education Lab’s journalism.

 ?? Ricardo B. Brazziell /Associated Press ?? Registered nurse April Burgeons administer­s a dose of a Pfizer-biontech COVID-19 vaccine to Gov. Greg Abbott in December 2020. Abbott told superinten­dents schools cannot require the vaccine for students and called the CDC guidelines “federal overreach.”
Ricardo B. Brazziell /Associated Press Registered nurse April Burgeons administer­s a dose of a Pfizer-biontech COVID-19 vaccine to Gov. Greg Abbott in December 2020. Abbott told superinten­dents schools cannot require the vaccine for students and called the CDC guidelines “federal overreach.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States