Quantcast

US vaccination decline continues: 250,000 kindergarteners vulnerable to measles

Officials blamed a variety of factors, including pandemic disruptions and hesitancy.

ARS TECHNICA

Routine childhood vaccination coverage continues to slip among US kindergarteners, falling from 95 percent—the target coverage—prior to the pandemic to 94 percent in the 2020–2021 school year and to the new low of 93 percent in the 2021–2022 school year, according to a fresh analysis published Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

While a 2 percent drop “might not sound significant, it means nearly 250,000 kindergarteners are potentially not protected against measles alone,” Georgina Peacock, director of the CDC’s Immunization Services Division, told reporters in a media briefing Thursday.

And, she added, national coverage of MMR vaccination—which protects against measles, mumps, and rubella—is now the lowest it has been in over a decade.

Peacock and other health experts in the briefing attributed the continued decline to a variety of factors. Prime among them are pandemic-related disruptions, such as missed well-child doctor’s appointments where routine vaccines are given.

“We have seen some hesitancy in vaccines during the pandemic related mostly, I think, to the COVID vaccine. This could in some cases have translated over to routine vaccinations.”

...article continued below
- Advertisement -

There’s also data suggesting barriers to access for children living below the poverty line or in rural areas. And vaccine misinformation and disinformation continue to play a role, as it has for many years prior to the pandemic.

Exemptions

In past years, when officials saw declining vaccination rates driven by anti-vaccine rhetoric, they also saw a corresponding rise in exemptions for school immunization requirements.

But CDC officials aren’t seeing that in the current data.

Though exemptions rose slightly from last year—by 0.4 percentage points—the main driver of the overall decrease in vaccination coverage was a larger increase in the number of children who are not up to date with their vaccines but who have no exemption status to explain the lack of shots …

...article continued below
- Advertisement -

read more. 

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

TRENDING

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -