AI Article Synopsis

  • State and local school vaccination requirements play a crucial role in safeguarding students against vaccine-preventable diseases, with the CDC reporting high vaccination coverage among kindergartners across the U.S.
  • Vaccination guidelines suggest young children should receive multiple doses of critical vaccines like DTaP, MMR, and varicella, contributing to overall high coverage rates of around 94% for these vaccines.
  • The report highlights that despite variability in state requirements, exemptions remain low at about 2%, indicating that vaccination efforts are effective in protecting communities, and local data can help further enhance immunization initiatives.

Article Abstract

State and local school vaccination requirements help protect students and communities against vaccine-preventable diseases (1). CDC reports vaccination coverage and exemption data for children attending kindergarten (kindergartners) collected by federally funded immunization programs in the United States.* The typical age range for kindergartners is 4-6 years. Although vaccination requirements vary by state (the District of Columbia [DC] is counted as a state in this report.), the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommends that children in this age range have received, among other vaccinations, 5 doses of diphtheria, tetanus, and acellular pertussis vaccine (DTaP), 2 doses of measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine (MMR), and 2 doses of varicella vaccine (2). This report summarizes 2016-17 school year MMR, DTaP, and varicella vaccination coverage reported by immunization programs in 49 states, exemptions in 50 states, and kindergartners provisionally enrolled or within a grace period in 27 states. Median vaccination coverage was 94.5% for the state-required number of doses of DTaP; 94.0% for 2 doses of MMR; and 93.8% for 2 doses of varicella vaccine. The median percentage of kindergartners with an exemption from at least one vaccine was 2.0%, similar to 2015-16 (1.9%). Median grace period and provisional enrollment was 2.0%. Vaccination coverage remains consistently high and exemptions low at state and national levels. Local-level vaccination coverage data provide opportunities for immunization programs to identify schools, districts, counties, or regions susceptible to vaccine-preventable diseases and for schools to address undervaccination through implementation of existing state and local vaccination policies (1) to protect communities through increased coverage.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5657930PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm6640a3DOI Listing

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