This city is hailed as a vaccination success. Can it be sustained?
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[September 16, 2024]
By MIKE STOBBE
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — On his first day of school at Newcomer Academy,
Maikel Tejeda was whisked to the school library. The 7th grader didn’t
know why.
He soon got the point: He was being given make-up vaccinations. Five of
them.
“I don’t have a problem with that,” said the 12-year-old, who moved from
Cuba early this year.
Across the library, a group of city, state and federal officials
gathered to celebrate the school clinic, and the city. With U.S.
childhood vaccination rates below their goals, Louisville and the state
were being praised as success stories: Kentucky's vaccination rate for
kindergarteners rose 2 percentage points in the 2022-2023 school year
compared with the year before. The rate for Jefferson County — which is
Louisville — was up 4 percentage points.
“Progress is success,” said Dr. Mandy Cohen, director of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
But that progress didn't last. Kentucky’s school entry vaccination rate
slipped last year. Jefferson County's rate slid, too. And the rates for
both the county and state remain well below the target thresholds.
It raises the question: If this is what success looks like, what does it
say about the nation's ability to stop imported infections from turning
into community outbreaks?
Local officials believe they can get to herd immunity thresholds, but
they acknowledge challenges that includes tight funding, misinformation
and well-intended bureaucratic rules that can discourage doctors from
giving kids shots.
“We're closing the gap,” said Eva Stone, who has managed the county
school system’s health services since 2018. “We're not closing the gap
very quickly.”
Falling vaccination rates
Public health experts focus on vaccination rates for kindergartners
because schools can be cauldrons for germs and the launching pad for
community outbreaks.
For years, those rates were high, thanks largely to mandates that
required key vaccinations as a condition of school attendance.
But they have slid in recent years. When COVID-19 started hitting the
U.S. hard in 2020, schools were closed, visits to pediatricians declined
and vaccination record-keeping fell off. Meanwhile, more parents
questioned routine childhood vaccinations that they used to
automatically accept, an effect that experts attribute to misinformation
and the political schism that emerged around COVID-19 vaccines.
A Gallup survey released last month found that 40% of Americans said it
is extremely important for parents to have their children vaccinated,
down from 58% in 2019. Meanwhile, a recent University of Pennsylvania
survey of 1,500 people found that about 1 in 4 U.S. adults think the
measles, mumps and rubella vaccine causes autism — despite no medical
evidence for it.
All that has led more parents to seek exemptions to school entry
vaccinations. The CDC has not yet reported national data for the
2023-2024 school year, but the proportion of U.S. kindergartners
exempted from school vaccination requirements the year before hit a
record 3%.
Overall, 93% of kindergartners got their required shots for the
2022-2023 school year. The rate was 95% in the years before the COVID-19
pandemic.
Officials worry slipping vaccination rates will lead to disease
outbreaks.
The roughly 250 U.S. measles cases reported so far this year are the
most since 2019, and Oregon is seeing its largest outbreak in more than
30 years.
Kentucky has been experiencing its worst outbreak of whooping cough —
another vaccine-preventable disease — since 2017. Nationally, nearly
14,000 cases have been reported this year, the most since 2019.
Persuading parents
The whooping cough surge is a warning sign but also an opportunity, said
Kim Tolley, a California-based historian who wrote a book last year on
the vaccination of American schoolchildren. She called for a public
relations campaign to “get everybody behind” improving immunizations.
Much of the discussion about raising vaccination rates centers on
campaigns designed to educate parents about the importance of
vaccinating children — especially those on the fence about getting shots
for their kids.
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Chanel Ferran Gutierrez, a 10th grade student at Newcomer Academy,
prepares to be vaccinated during a pop-up immunization clinic in the
school's library in Louisville, Ky., on Thursday, Aug. 8, 2024. (AP
Photo/Mary Conlon)
But experts are still hashing out what kind of messaging work best: Is
it better, for example, to say “vaccinate” or "immunize''?
A lot of the messaging is influenced by feedback from small focus
groups. One takeaway is some people have less trust in health officials
and even their own doctors than they once did. Another is that they
strongly trust their own feelings about vaccines and what they've seen
in Internet searches or heard from other sources.
“Their overconfidence is hard to shake. It's hard to poke holes in it,"
said Mike Perry, who ran focus groups on behalf of a group called the
Public Health Communications Collaborative.
But many people seem more trusting of older vaccines. And they do seem
to be at least curious about information they didn't know, including the
history of research behind vaccines and the dangers of the diseases they
were created to fight, he said.
Some of the CDC's recent communications take a gentle approach.
One example is a digital media ad that depicts a boy playing with a toy
Tyrannosaurus rex. The caption reads, “He thinks ‘diphtheria’ is the
name of a dinosaur." It's an attempt to use humor while sending a
message that children no longer know much about the infections that used
to be common threats — and it's better to keep it that way.
Improving access
Dolores Albarracin has studied vaccination improvement strategies in 17
countries, and repeatedly found that the most effective strategy is to
make it easier for kids to get vaccinated.
“In practice, most people are not vaccinating simply because they don't
have money to take the bus” or have other troubles getting to
appointments, said Albarracin, director of the communication science
division within Penn's Annenberg Public Policy Center.
That's a problem in Louisville, where officials say few doctors were
providing vaccinations to children enrolled in Medicaid and fewer still
were providing shots to kids without any health insurance. An analysis a
few years ago indicated 1 in 5 children — about 20,000 kids — were not
current on their vaccinations, and most of them were poor, said Stone,
the county school health manager.
A 30-year-old federal program called Vaccines for Children pays for
vaccinations for children who Medicaid-eligible or lack the insurance to
cover it.
But in a meeting with the CDC director last month, Louisville health
officials lamented that most local doctors don't participate in the
program because of paperwork and other administrative headaches. And it
can be tough for patients to get the time and transportation to get to
those few dozen Louisville providers who do take part.
The school system has tried to fill the gap. In 2019, it applied to
become a VFC provider, and gradually established vaccine clinics.
Last year, it held clinics at nearly all 160 schools, and it's doing the
same thing this year. The first was at Newcomer Academy, where many
immigrant students behind on their vaccinations are started in the
school system.
It's been challenging, Stone said. Funding is very limited. There are
bureaucratic obstacles, and a growing influx of children from other
countries who need shots. It takes multiple trips to a doctor or clinic
to complete some vaccine series. And then there's the opposition —
vaccination clinic announcements tend to draw hateful social media
comments.
But there's also a lot of support. The local health department and
nursing schools are crucial partners, and city leaders support the
endeavor.
At the recent vaccination celebration, Mayor Craig Greenberg
acknowledged access problems and that vaccinations have become
politicized.
But "to me, there’s nothing political about improving public health,
about improving the health of our kids," said Greenberg, a Democrat.
“There should be no debate about that.”
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AP video journalist Mary Conlon contributed to this report.
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