South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Shedding ‘anti-vax’ past

Parents in wealthy Calif. county once opposed shots for childhood diseases. Then came COVID-19

- By Soumya Karlamangl­a The New York Times

SAN RAFAEL, Calif. — For more than a decade, few places in the nation were associated with anti-vaccine movements as much as Marin County, the bluff-lined peninsula of coastal redwoods and stunning views just north of San Francisco.

This corner of the Bay Area had become a prime example of a highly educated, affluent community with low childhood vaccinatio­n rates, driven by a contingent of liberal parents skeptical of traditiona­l medicine. Marin was something of a paradox to mainstream Democrats, and often a punching bag. In 2015, during a measles outbreak in California, comedian Jon Stewart blamed Marin parents for being guilty of a “mindful stupidity.”

But Marin is the anti-vaccine capital no more.

In the pandemic age, getting a

COVID-19 shot has become the defining “vax” or “anti-vax” litmus test, and on that account, Marin County has embraced vaccines at rates that surpass the vast majority of communitie­s in the nation. It comes after public health efforts to change parents’ opinions, as well as a strict state mandate that students get vaccinated for childhood diseases.

And as the nation has grown more polarized, Marin residents are less comfortabl­e wearing the “anti-vax” label increasing­ly associated with conservati­ves. Americans who identify as Democrats are more than twice as likely to be vaccinated and boosted against

COVID-19 — and Marin County is one of the bluest enclaves in the United States.

“It kind of became the cool thing to do to get vaccinated,” said Naveen Kumar, physician-in-chief for Kaiser Permanente San Rafael Medical Center.

A mood shift

Among children 5 to 11, 80% in Marin County have both of their

COVID-19 shots, more than double the statewide or national rates. The rate among those younger than 5 is more than five times the nation’s.

Given that one-fifth of elementary-school-age children here still have not gotten the vaccines, it is not clear that Marin holdouts have changed their minds. But anti-vaccine parents no longer feel as empowered to voice their opinions. The mood shift was pointedly captured by a local columnist, who declared in January, “Unvaccinat­ed? You’re not welcome in Marin.”

Julie Schiffman, 50, doesn’t have her COVID-19 shots; she said she believes vaccines would aggravate her many autoimmune conditions. Because she is unvaccinat­ed, she has been excluded from Marin home-schooling gatherings that she had attended for years, even though parents were previously unconcerne­d with whether anyone had their shots.

For the first time, she said, she feels as if people here despise her on principle.

Schiffman said that when her sons were young, she decided not to have them vaccinated because of similar concerns about vaccine side effects. Their vaccinatio­n status was never an issue for student enrollment because she home-schools them.

But because of the social pressure to be vaccinated against

COVID-19, the boys got their

COVID-19 shots last year. Her

13-year-old “wanted to be first in line,” Schiffman said. “I’m the only one in my family who did not.”

Across the Golden Gate Bridge from San Francisco, Marin County has strikingly beautiful landscapes and lush, wooded neighborho­ods. The region was once largely made up of farms and small communitie­s, with locals dedicated to living off the land.

The county became more bohemian in the 1960s and 1970s as the countercul­ture diaspora arrived, seeking to get away from the chaos of San Francisco. The Grateful Dead lived in a commune here in 1966, and Otis Redding wrote “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay” while staying on a houseboat off Sausalito.

Marin is also a bastion of wealth, with California’s highest median joint income in 2019 at $178,755.

On weekends, luxury cars sneak past cyclists atop high-end bikes on roads heading toward the great Pacific.

Before he became the Democratic governor of California, Gavin Newsom lived with his family on a hillside in Marin — with three

Tesla vehicles in his driveway, The New Yorker once wrote.

In 2011, the percentage of kindergart­ners in Marin County who had all of their required shots — 78% — had fallen to fifthlowes­t among California’s 58 counties. Whooping cough outbreaks fueled by low vaccinatio­n rates were sending young children to the hospital.

Hesitancy fight

Around that time, Matt Willis was working as a public health researcher for a branch of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that responds to global disease outbreaks.

In 2010, he had been sent to Haiti after a massive earthquake there severely limited access to vaccines.

The following year, he was dispatched to his hometown in Marin County, where he was perplexed by what he found.

“In other places I’d been working on vaccines, it was purely just logistical and operationa­l, and here it was a matter of belief, which was a much harder nut to crack.”

Willis left the CDC and in 2013 took over as Marin County’s health officer, and he was intent on figuring

out why relatively few parents were vaccinatin­g their children.

He surveyed the parents of thousands of kindergart­ners to understand what their vaccine concerns were.

On the list were autism, ingredient­s in vaccines and the speed at which babies are administer­ed dozens of shots.

A 1998 study that purported to connect the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine with autism was debunked and retracted — but only after propelling the anti-vaccine movement, particular­ly among parents skeptical of traditiona­l medicine and pharmaceut­ical companies.

Willis began public health campaigns to specifical­ly address those fears and primed local pediatrici­ans to have those conversati­ons too.

His efforts got a boost when, in 2014, a measles outbreak erupted at Disneyland, drawing greater attention to unvaccinat­ed kids. When cases spread to Marin County, its low vaccinatio­n rates became a glaring example in California.

At the same time, Rhett Krawitt, then a 6-year-old living in Corte Madera, was battling leukemia and was too medically fragile to be immunized against measles. An infection could kill him.

Sitting in their backyard this summer, home to a vegetable garden and a pickleball court, his father, Carl Krawitt, recalled how Rhett’s oncologist urged them to ask the parents of classmates to get their children vaccinated.

When they did, it seemed as if parents who had avoided vaccines

hadn’t fully grasped that there could be real consequenc­es for other people, Krawitt said. “Once they understood it, they went out and got vaccinated,” Krawitt said.

Rhett, then a towheaded boy with a round face, spoke at the State Capitol to urge lawmakers to pass a stricter vaccinatio­n requiremen­t that was sparked by the measles outbreak. The law, which requires that all California children receive vaccines to attend school, passed in the summer of 2015. Vaccinatio­n rates subsequent­ly increased in Marin County and statewide.

And then the pandemic hit. The county was one of the first areas in the nation to implement a stay-at-home order in March 2020. Adherence to masking and social distancing here was high in the early days of the pandemic. And, locals say, the benefits of a vaccine quickly became obvious.

Willis also capitalize­d on his years of combating vaccine hesitancy.

Culture change

Anticipati­ng that Marin parents might resist vaccinatin­g their children, he decided to administer COVID-19 vaccines for ages 5 to 11 largely at schools.

He hoped that campus-based events — where staff played music, decorated with balloons and even brought comfort dogs — were less intimidati­ng than going to a doctor’s office. Within the first two weeks of the rollout for children ages 5 to 11, 40% of Marin County kids in that age group had gotten their first COVID-19 vaccine dose, half at the school events.

Now, Marin County’s COVID19 vaccinatio­n rate among all residents is 91%, compared with 68% nationwide.

The county has also shed its reputation as an anti-vaccine haven in part because of how much vocal resistance has taken root elsewhere.

Marin County was once faulted for having a childhood vaccinatio­n rate of 78%. Now, almost every county in America has a lower

COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rate among children.

The anti-vaccine movement used to be a place where the left met the right, but increased polarizati­on during the pandemic has made such a combinatio­n difficult to sustain, said Jennifer Reich, sociology professor at the University of Colorado Denver and the author of “Calling the Shots: Why Parents Reject Vaccines.”

“When we start to see such vastly different sources of informatio­n about what the risks of infection of COVID are, you start to see people making wildly different decisions in their life,” Reich said. “The vaccine and scientific expertise has become politicize­d.”

Schiffman said her children got the COVID-19 vaccine because they wanted to be able to go to camp, concerts and the climbing gym with their friends. Without her shots, she frequently can’t get into restaurant­s and other places because they require that patrons show vaccine cards.

She said she might think about moving if life became even tougher to navigate without proof of vaccinatio­n.

“I will never ever put a vaccinatio­n in my body ever again,” Schiffman said. “Would that mean splitting up my family? It could.”

The culture change in Marin has been so dramatic that many new parents struggle to understand how the county earned its infamous reputation.

Dana McRay, a Corte Madera resident who recently took her

3- and 5-year-old daughters to get their COVID-19 vaccines, said she has “never met anyone who was anti-vax, or at least who talks about it.”

In a local parenting Facebook group McRay is in, a mother recently asked if anyone would have a play date with her unvaccinat­ed kids. “All of the other parents told her there was a separate Facebook group for anti-vax parents, and she should take her request there.”

 ?? ?? Parisa and Joe Griess keep sons Julian and Cyrus calm during their second COVID-19 shots Sept. 2 in San Rafael, California. Marin County’s COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rate among all residents is 91%, compared with 68% nationwide.
Parisa and Joe Griess keep sons Julian and Cyrus calm during their second COVID-19 shots Sept. 2 in San Rafael, California. Marin County’s COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rate among all residents is 91%, compared with 68% nationwide.
 ?? JIM WILSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? Rhett Krawitt, 14, enjoys his favorite hobby with his father, Carl Krawitt, on Aug. 28 in Belvedere, California.
JIM WILSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS Rhett Krawitt, 14, enjoys his favorite hobby with his father, Carl Krawitt, on Aug. 28 in Belvedere, California.
 ?? ?? Schiffman
Schiffman
 ?? ?? Willis
Willis

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