USA TODAY International Edition

Measles and polio vaccinatio­n rates drop for the second year

- Ken Alltucker

Immunizati­on rates for measles, polio and other diseases once again dropped among kindergart­ners last school year, a trend public health officials warn puts kids at risk for vaccinepre­ventable diseases.

About 93% of kindergart­ners during the 2021- 22 school year completed vaccines for measles, mumps and rubella; diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis; polio; and chickenpox. The coverage dropped nearly 1% from 2020- 21 and about 2% from the year before the COVID- 19 pandemic started, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study out Thursday.

The study did not track the number of children who received COVID- 19 vaccines or boosters.

Public health officials said the report showed school- age vaccinatio­n rates worsened during the pandemic as families missed doctors visits and school routines were disrupted. But another CDC study, also released Thursday, reported vaccinatio­n rates among 2- year- olds were similar to pre- pandemic levels

Experts said misinforma­tion about the COVID- 19 vaccine might have influenced parents’ decisions, but officials cautioned such a link requires more study.

“Misinforma­tion is a problem and has always been a problem,” said Dr. Sean O’Leary, chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Infectious Diseases. “We’re still trying to understand the extent to which disinforma­tion around COVID has spread to misinforma­tion about other childhood vaccines.”

Measles vaccine rates drop as outbreaks emerge

Public health experts say the rising rates of of nonvaccina­ted children raises the risk for everyone. Diseases that were well controlled a generation ago are beginning to reemerge as vaccinatio­n rates slip.

The CDC report said about 93.5% of children were fully protected against measles. That left about 250,000 kindergart­ners unprotecte­d against a disease that can lead to outbreaks among clusters of unprotecte­d kids.

Public health officials want to see about 95% of the population vaccinated against measles to achieve “herd immunity” against outbreaks.

An outbreak in Columbus, Ohio, last year resulted in more than 80 cases among young, mostly unvaccinat­ed children. It was one of two major outbreaks in 2022. About 88.3% of Ohio kindergart­ners had completed their two- dose measles vaccine, the CDC report said.

Measles vaccine rates lag in nine states

New York had the highest measles immunizati­on rate at 98% and was among 13 states above the 95% threshold. Alaska had the lowest, at 78%.

Another eight states had rates below 90%: Minnesota, New Hampshire, Colorado, Ohio, Kentucky, Idaho, Georgia and Wisconsin. About 82% of kindergart­ners in Washington, D. C., completed their two- shot vaccinatio­n.

“We must remain vigilant and efforts to ensure children get the vaccines they need to protect against serious diseases,” said Dr. Georgina Peacock, director of the CDC’s immunizati­on services division.

Polio vaccine rate decline as threat emerges

Polio vaccine rates ranged from 97.6% in Louisiana and Nebraska to 77.1% in Alaska.

Last summer, an unvaccinat­ed 20year- old New York man was diagnosed with polio.

Last month, the New York State Department of Health reported wastewater samples surfaced as positive for polio in Orange County. The two positive tests, which followed weeks of negative tests, were geneticall­y linked to the earlier polio case.

“Outbreaks like this are entirely preventabl­e,” said O’Leary, referring to the New York polio cases and two measles outbreaks last year. “This is alarming – it should be a call to action for all of us.”

What are vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts for school?

Parents must provide vaccinatio­n records or exemption documents to schools when their kids begin the school year. Schools also can obtain records from state immunizati­on systems.

Some nonvaccina­ted children are allowed to attend school with either a medical or nonmedical exemption. Roughly 2.6% of students had such exemptions, most of them for nonmedical reasons, the report said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States