Private school vaccine opt-outs rise

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - Parents who send their children to private schools in California are much more likely to opt out of immunizations than their public school counterparts, an Associated Press analysis has found, and not even the recent re-emergence of whooping cough has halted the downward trajectory of vaccinations among these students.
The state surveys all schools with at least 10 kindergartners to determine how many have all the recommended immunizations. The AP analyzed that data and found the percentage of children in private schools who forego some or all vaccinations is more than two times greater than in public schools.
More troubling to public health officials is that the rate of children entering private schools without all of their shots jumped by 10 percent last year, while the opt-out figures held steady in public schools for the first time since 2004.
Public health officials believe that an immunization rate of at least 90 percent in all communities, including schools, is critical to minimizing the potential for a disease outbreak. About 15 percent of the 1,650 private schools surveyed by the state failed to reach that threshold, compared with 5 percent of public schools.
There were 110 private schools statewide where more than half the kindergartners skipped some or all of their shots, according to AP's analysis, with Highland Hall Waldorf School in Northridge - where 84 percent opted out - topping the list.
Parents cite a variety of reasons for not immunizing their children, among them: religious values, concerns the shots themselves could cause illness and a belief that allowing children to get sick helps them to build a stronger immune system. Likewise, there's no single explanation that accounts for why so many more parents who send their children to private schools apparently share a suspicion of immunizations.
Saad Omer, a professor of global health at Emory University in Atlanta who has studied vaccine refusal in private schools, surmised more private school parents are wealthy and have the time to spread five shots over a series of years and stay home should their child get an illness like chickenpox. Neal Halsey, a professor of pediatric infectious diseases at the Johns Hopkins University, said parents who choose private schools are likely to be more skeptical of state requirements and recommendations.
Bibi Reber, whose children attend the Waldorf-inspired Greenwood School in Mill Valley, had her children vaccinated only for what she sees as the deadliest diseases. Greenwood has a 79 percent opt-out rate among its kindergartners.
"I don't think dirt or getting sick makes you a weak person; your immune system needs to work with things," said Reber, whose children attend the Greenwood School in the San Francisco Bay area town of Mill Valley. "We certainly don't want to go back to having polio, but on the other hand, I don't think we need to eradicate all the childhood diseases."
Public health officials say that, regardless of why parents choose not to vaccinate their children, the result is the same: an increased risk of an outbreak of whooping cough or other communicable diseases.
"We're very concerned that those schools are places where disease can spread quite rapidly through the school and into the community, should it get introduced," said Dr. Robert Schechter, medical officer with the Immunization Branch of the California Department of Public Health.
That's what prompted the Legislature to approve a bill requiring parents to discuss vaccinations with a pediatricians or a school nurse before they can opt-out. Gov. Jerry Brown has until the end of September to sign or veto it.
State Assemblyman Richard Pan, a pediatrician, who sponsored the bill, said he believes private school parents are more apt to mistakenly believe that the vaccinations themselves could be more dangerous than the diseases.
"In private school, these are people who have money, who are upper middle-class, and they are going on the Internet and seeing information and misinformation," said Pan, D-Sacramento.
Increasing immunization rates for this population is critical to controlling the outbreak of diseases, he said. "Have you ever seen a child cough themselves to death? It's not pleasant," he said.
Those who choose not to vaccinate their children see the legislation as meddlesome and unnecessary.
"It's making an extra appointment and paying extra money to go in there and essentially get permission to do what I feel is right for my family," said Dawn Kelly, who sends her unvaccinated 5-year-old son and partially vaccinated 9-year-old son to Monarch Christian School in the Los Angeles area.
Like many parents who refuse some or all immunization shots, Kelly worries her children's immune system could be overwhelmed by getting too many vaccines at once.
Melani Gold Friedman, president of the parent association at Highland Hall Waldorf School, is concerned with what the legislation means for families who normally consult with acupuncturists, holistic healers or other alternative practitioners.
"The bill has an assumption that everyone's seeing one particular kind of doctor, but the people who are opting out, chances are they're not seeing that kind of doctor," she said.
Vaccination opt-out rates nationwide have been creeping up since the mid-2000s, spurred in part by the belief the battery of vaccinations routinely given to infants could lead to autism. Several major studies have discredited that idea.
Parents are allowed to forego vaccines for philosophical reasons in California and 19 other states. Of those, only Washington requires parents to consult with a physician. And, in California, there's no difference between private and public schools when it comes to what's required for parents to opt out - they simply sign a document. The state recommends that kindergarteners receive five vaccine progressions, including protections against Polio, Hepatitis B and Measles
Politicians and public health experts across the nation are focusing more attention on childhood immunizations, driven by a re-emergence of diseases like whooping cough. The U.S. is in the midst of what could be its worst year for that disease in more than five decades, with nearly 25,000 cases and 13 deaths.
After whooping cough reached epidemic levels in California in 2010, the state took action, embarking on a public information campaign and increasing the availability of vaccines. A law was passed requiring booster shots for older students.
Yet the opt-out rate continued climbing in private schools. It's more than doubled since 2004, to 2,228 kindergartners in last year's state survey. While the overall rate of full immunization among kindergarteners hovers around 91 percent, places where the opt-out rate is greater could pose a risk for outbreak.
In 2008, East Bay Waldorf School in El Sobrante closed temporarily after whooping cough sickened more than a dozen students, eight of them kindergartners. The San Francisco Bay Area school had a vaccination rate of less than 50 percent.
State health officials are tracking the divergence of opt-out rates in private and public schools, but are not planning any studies or outreach efforts targeting this pupil population. The state is conducting a general education campaign to boost vaccinate rates.
The AP analysis found 20 of the 25 California private schools with the highest opt-out rates are "Waldorf schools," a loose association of institutions founded on the teachings of 19th-century philosopher Rudolf Steiner. He favored a holistic approach to education and medicine and thought childhood illnesses could be beneficial.
Officials at these schools would not comment about Pan's bill but say they trust parents to make the best decisions for their children's health.
"Parents who are brave enough to say, 'No, that's not the right thing,' should be supported," said Patrice Maynard, spokeswoman for the Association of Waldorf Schools of North America.
The state surveys all schools with at least 10 kindergartners to determine how many have all the recommended immunizations. The AP analyzed that data and found the percentage of children in private schools who forego some or all vaccinations is more than two times greater than in public schools.
More troubling to public health officials is that the rate of children entering private schools without all of their shots jumped by 10 percent last year, while the opt-out figures held steady in public schools for the first time since 2004.
Public health officials believe that an immunization rate of at least 90 percent in all communities, including schools, is critical to minimizing the potential for a disease outbreak. About 15 percent of the 1,650 private schools surveyed by the state failed to reach that threshold, compared with 5 percent of public schools.
There were 110 private schools statewide where more than half the kindergartners skipped some or all of their shots, according to AP's analysis, with Highland Hall Waldorf School in Northridge - where 84 percent opted out - topping the list.
Parents cite a variety of reasons for not immunizing their children, among them: religious values, concerns the shots themselves could cause illness and a belief that allowing children to get sick helps them to build a stronger immune system. Likewise, there's no single explanation that accounts for why so many more parents who send their children to private schools apparently share a suspicion of immunizations.
Saad Omer, a professor of global health at Emory University in Atlanta who has studied vaccine refusal in private schools, surmised more private school parents are wealthy and have the time to spread five shots over a series of years and stay home should their child get an illness like chickenpox. Neal Halsey, a professor of pediatric infectious diseases at the Johns Hopkins University, said parents who choose private schools are likely to be more skeptical of state requirements and recommendations.
Bibi Reber, whose children attend the Waldorf-inspired Greenwood School in Mill Valley, had her children vaccinated only for what she sees as the deadliest diseases. Greenwood has a 79 percent opt-out rate among its kindergartners.
"I don't think dirt or getting sick makes you a weak person; your immune system needs to work with things," said Reber, whose children attend the Greenwood School in the San Francisco Bay area town of Mill Valley. "We certainly don't want to go back to having polio, but on the other hand, I don't think we need to eradicate all the childhood diseases."
Public health officials say that, regardless of why parents choose not to vaccinate their children, the result is the same: an increased risk of an outbreak of whooping cough or other communicable diseases.
"We're very concerned that those schools are places where disease can spread quite rapidly through the school and into the community, should it get introduced," said Dr. Robert Schechter, medical officer with the Immunization Branch of the California Department of Public Health.
That's what prompted the Legislature to approve a bill requiring parents to discuss vaccinations with a pediatricians or a school nurse before they can opt-out. Gov. Jerry Brown has until the end of September to sign or veto it.
State Assemblyman Richard Pan, a pediatrician, who sponsored the bill, said he believes private school parents are more apt to mistakenly believe that the vaccinations themselves could be more dangerous than the diseases.
"In private school, these are people who have money, who are upper middle-class, and they are going on the Internet and seeing information and misinformation," said Pan, D-Sacramento.
Increasing immunization rates for this population is critical to controlling the outbreak of diseases, he said. "Have you ever seen a child cough themselves to death? It's not pleasant," he said.
Those who choose not to vaccinate their children see the legislation as meddlesome and unnecessary.
"It's making an extra appointment and paying extra money to go in there and essentially get permission to do what I feel is right for my family," said Dawn Kelly, who sends her unvaccinated 5-year-old son and partially vaccinated 9-year-old son to Monarch Christian School in the Los Angeles area.
Like many parents who refuse some or all immunization shots, Kelly worries her children's immune system could be overwhelmed by getting too many vaccines at once.
Melani Gold Friedman, president of the parent association at Highland Hall Waldorf School, is concerned with what the legislation means for families who normally consult with acupuncturists, holistic healers or other alternative practitioners.
"The bill has an assumption that everyone's seeing one particular kind of doctor, but the people who are opting out, chances are they're not seeing that kind of doctor," she said.
Vaccination opt-out rates nationwide have been creeping up since the mid-2000s, spurred in part by the belief the battery of vaccinations routinely given to infants could lead to autism. Several major studies have discredited that idea.
Parents are allowed to forego vaccines for philosophical reasons in California and 19 other states. Of those, only Washington requires parents to consult with a physician. And, in California, there's no difference between private and public schools when it comes to what's required for parents to opt out - they simply sign a document. The state recommends that kindergarteners receive five vaccine progressions, including protections against Polio, Hepatitis B and Measles
Politicians and public health experts across the nation are focusing more attention on childhood immunizations, driven by a re-emergence of diseases like whooping cough. The U.S. is in the midst of what could be its worst year for that disease in more than five decades, with nearly 25,000 cases and 13 deaths.
After whooping cough reached epidemic levels in California in 2010, the state took action, embarking on a public information campaign and increasing the availability of vaccines. A law was passed requiring booster shots for older students.
Yet the opt-out rate continued climbing in private schools. It's more than doubled since 2004, to 2,228 kindergartners in last year's state survey. While the overall rate of full immunization among kindergarteners hovers around 91 percent, places where the opt-out rate is greater could pose a risk for outbreak.
In 2008, East Bay Waldorf School in El Sobrante closed temporarily after whooping cough sickened more than a dozen students, eight of them kindergartners. The San Francisco Bay Area school had a vaccination rate of less than 50 percent.
State health officials are tracking the divergence of opt-out rates in private and public schools, but are not planning any studies or outreach efforts targeting this pupil population. The state is conducting a general education campaign to boost vaccinate rates.
The AP analysis found 20 of the 25 California private schools with the highest opt-out rates are "Waldorf schools," a loose association of institutions founded on the teachings of 19th-century philosopher Rudolf Steiner. He favored a holistic approach to education and medicine and thought childhood illnesses could be beneficial.
Officials at these schools would not comment about Pan's bill but say they trust parents to make the best decisions for their children's health.
"Parents who are brave enough to say, 'No, that's not the right thing,' should be supported," said Patrice Maynard, spokeswoman for the Association of Waldorf Schools of North America.
For all of you that don't know all shots have eggs in them, and for someone with an egg allergy it can be deadly.  Also, without knowing everything that is in shots I don't get them without discussing with my medical provider what is in them, as some can also contain other binders in them besides eggs, such as wheat or other gluten products.  I also don't take any medications that are prescribed for me without first having my medical provider make sure that there are no wheat or gluten products in them, since for me wheat and gluten cause me to have allergic reactions.  Parents often are not getting their kids vaccinated all at once because of other underlying allergies or sensitives to what are in the shots. This is a big reason why a lot of parents opt out of getting them, because it could make their child or children even sicker than the disease itself. Â
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Everyone I grew up with had chicken pox and it never killed anyone, therefore, I don't think having a chickenpox vaccine is necessary.
How about this, if you opt out of having your child immunized, you sign a contract with the school that covers the teachers and the other students should YOUR child expose them to a preventable childhood disease. The contract states that you will assume all financial responsibility for the treatment, lost wages of the parents should they have to stay home to care for a child that YOUR child infected, and any other expenses resulting from the illness. Gawd forbid one of the children or teachers should become so seriously ill that they were to die, but that would mean you would accept a guilty plea to pre meditated murder. I remember what polo did to young healthy children; even measles, mumps, and chicken pox can cause severe medical problems. Get off your high horses and do the responsible thing, we are not talking just about YOUR child but other peopleâs children as well.
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 @Circe What people are refusing to get is that things like pertussis! Can kill children and will kill someones baby, babies can not start getting shots until 2 months of age sometimes a lil later. Why not get your kid a pertussis vaccine?? Why put your kid threw a fucked up disease if you don't have to?? Why risk your kid possibly infected another parents new baby and killing it, Parents who opt out, they can sign their own babies death certificate but please don't sign my babys due to your arrogance.
 @@amber@  @Circe You are insanely buying into the fear based propaganda that the medical field pushes because they benefit from administering these vaccines.  Read up on why doctors push vaccines so much don't take my word for it.  You obviously have no faith in your own bodies immune system.  There is a reason that antibodies get passed through breast milk and this has been happening since the beginning of time.  Whooping cough can be fought off naturally with the help of the natural immunity that is transferred from mother to child and by keeping a sanitary environment and good hygiene.  We live in a world where mass vaccination is not really necessary if everyone practices good hygiene and stays home when they are ill.  There are two types of immunity TH-1 and that is immunity by contracting and recovering from a disease and that is full immunity and there is TH-2 and that is partial immunity not full from getting a vaccine.  The ability to pass on immunity to an infant from TH-2 immunity does not work and thus prevents future generations from doing so.  That to me is scary and  that is what is happening.  I am not ant-vaccine but I do vaccinate cautiously and I do not vaccinate for everything.  I keep myself and my family home when sick and teach them that if they do cough on someone else they may be endangering their health.  The fact is to call people baby killers because they don't get vaccinated is absurd.  More babies die from RSV each year than have ever died from whooping cough and you never hear about that disease?  Why? Because they can't make money off a vaccination.  Fear.  That's all it is.  It's your job to keep your baby safe from disease not the entire population's.  If there is a whooping cough epidemic, keep small vunerable babies home and don't let anyone around them, they shouldn't be out any way.  I also don't think I would be taking advice from someone who can't spell and uses the "f" word in an argument about babies health.
 @Circe Oh please.  We live in America and I think the least of your worries should be children who are not vaccinated.  I use the word vaccinated not immunized like you ,because a vaccination does not mean you are immune.  The only way to gain full immunity to a disease is by contracting it and recovering from it.  News flash, people have been getting the tdap and guess what they still contract whooping cough.  People get flu shots and still contract the flu.  Most of your live virus vaccines are more effective, the MMR and chicken pox vaccine, but they have a high rate of reaction as well.  How many teachers have died from unvaccinated children?  How many children have died from unvaccinated children, I think you are being a little dramatic.  How about you get off your high horse and stop trying to tell people what they should do based on your opinion.  If you want mandatory vaccinations maybe you should go live in a communist country. Â
 @Circe If your child has been fully immunized and current, why would you be concerned about your child catching a disease from mine? Vaccines are supposed to prevent this from happening right?  Food for thought...Â
@Really W_T_F @Circe Vaccines are not 100% effective, which is why it's so important that all children get vaccinated - herd immunity, you know. Also, some children cannot get vaccinated due to medical reasons, so those children that *can* receive vaccinations should do so.
Our private school requires vaccines. Â Now to examine the bias in this study. Â More often than not, parents of children with compromised learning abilities turn to private education. Â Some of these parents believe there is a link between spectrum disorders and vaccines. Â Not stating an opinion here, it's just an observation. Â These parents research and really focus on everything that can impact their child(ren). Â This is somewhat of a generalization but an observation still.
This is a "problem" that solves itself.
No doubt these are "progressive" or granola private schools.Â
 @GeorgeG. When using the term "progressive" or granola what exactly do you mean?  Do you mean breastfeeding your children and giving them natural immunity?  Or eating organic food without GMO's or other preservatives that are making us fat and killing us?  Maybe refusing a few vaccines would put me in your category of being "progressive"  or "granola".  People today have no idea what the body is intended to do.  They have no trust or maybe they just don't have the time to let the body fight of disease on it's own.  Of course I am not talking about polio or smallpox but I am talking about chicken pox, the flu, roto virus and some other vaccines given to babies when their mother's breast milk already contains the antibodies to fight them naturally.  There are even  antibodies found in the mother's breast milk to help fight whooping cough.  Someday these vaccinations are going to come back and haunt us.  They will  render our own immune system useless by taking the ability to pass on natural immunity.  It is already happening with the chicken pox vaccine.  Woman who have had the varcilla virus shot as babies and did not contract and recover from chicken pox are not able to pass on natural immunity to chicken pox to their babies as to where the woman who contracted chicken pox and recovered from it will be able to pass that immunity on to their newborns protecting them from chicken pox from birth.  To me " a granola" that is a scary thought.  Pick up a microbiology book for kicks and educate yourself on vaccines and the immune system.  If a doctor tells you to get a vaccine, they tell everyone that.  Make up your own mind don't just get it because someone tells you to.Â
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 @GeorgeG. I'm not a 'progressive'.  But seeing children react with febrile seizures, couple with the knowledge that many who push pharma are the lowest slimeballs on earth,  have me doing a little research.  It's jaw-dropping shocking what we're not being told. (but then pharma pays a lot for advertising)