Πέμπτη 5 Φεβρουαρίου 2015

Low vaccination rates at schools put students at risk

Nearly one in seven public and private schools have measles vaccination rates below 90% — a rate considered inadequate to provide immunity, according to a USA TODAY analysis of immunization data in 13 states.
Hundreds of thousands of students attend schools — ranging from small, private academies in New York City to large public elementary schools outside Boston to Native American reservation schools in Idaho — where vaccination rates have dropped precipitously low, sometimes under 50%. California, Vermont, Rhode Island, Arizona, Minnesota, Florida, Illinois, North Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia also were included in the analysis.
The 13-state sample shows what many experts have long feared: People opposed to vaccinations tend to live near each other, leaving some schools dangerously vulnerable, while other schools are fully protected.
The clusters create hot spots that state immunization rates can mask. In the 32 public elementary schools in Boise, Idaho, for example, vaccination rates for measles in 2013-14 ranged from 84.5% at William Howard Taft Elementary to 100% at Adams Elementary, just 4 miles away.
Some clusters are among people who have philosophical objections to vaccines; other clusters are in poorer neighborhoods, where parents do not stay up to date with their children's vaccinations.
More troubling in an outbreak that has sickened more than 100 people in 14 states: how few states keep records of school immunization rates, despite repeated recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
"Really, what should concern parents is the microclimate of their child's school or day care center. And we just had no information about it," said Sunari Kraft, who helped push through a Colorado bill last year requiring schools to provide vaccination rates to anyone who asks. The state does not collect or analyze the data.
"We want to look at ways we can better protect our children before we experience a health crisis," she said.
Most states couldn't provide USA TODAY with school-level data. In some states, officials cited health record privacy laws. Others said they didn't keep the figures on schools.
Many of the more than 27,000 schools in USA TODAY's analysis have perfect or near-perfect vaccination rates for kindergartners. More than 1,100 schools in California – about a seventh of all private and public schools in the state – reported kindergarten vaccination rates above 99%. About a quarter of all Rhode Island schools met that mark, as did two-thirds of schools in North Carolina.
In some parts of Virginia, Southern California, North Carolina and Massachusetts, the low rates are because student records are missing, or students have fallen behind on their vaccine schedules. At 19 elementary schools in Los Angeles' Unified School District, so many students are behind in getting their shots that fewer than 20% were considered fully vaccinated at the start of the school year.

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