Texas seeing an increase in kindergarteners who don't meet state
requirements for measles shots
[October 14, 2025]
By TERRI LANGFORD and DAN KEEMAHILL/The Texas Tribune
Before the pandemic helped fuel the growth of vaccine politicization
across the country, less than 1% of Austin school district’s
kindergarteners in the fall of 2019 failed to comply with the state’s
vaccine reporting requirements.
Five years later, the Austin Independent School District had some of the
state’s highest number of kindergarteners who neglected those state
requirements — about 1 in 5 kindergarteners had not proven they were
fully vaccinated against measles and did not file an exemption.
A Texas Tribune analysis has found that this explosion of vaccine
non-compliance has played out across many school districts in the state
in recent years, helping to push Texas’ measles vaccine coverage to the
lowest it’s been since at least 2011.
“We definitely were on a better trajectory (before the pandemic),” said
Alana Bejarano, executive director of health services and nursing for
the Austin school district, which reported a 23% delinquency rate for
the measles vaccines among their kindergarteners.
“I don’t know that I can pinpoint the concrete answer, except (preschool
and kindergarteners) were born at a time where everything kind of went
off track and getting them back into that, you know, that’s been
difficult.”

The Tribune examined kindergarten measles vaccination compliance because
it’s the earliest the state documents school vaccination rates and
measles can be especially deadly for young children. The state’s two
measles deaths this year were girls ages 6 and 8. Under Texas vaccine
requirements, most kindergarteners must show they are fully vaccinated
against measles or file an exemption to enroll in school; most who are
not fully vaccinated have an exemption.
During the pandemic, the statewide measles vaccine delinquency rate — a
term the Texas Department of State Health Services uses to track
students not compliant with those requirements — more than doubled.
The Tribune estimated the number of vaccine-delinquent kindergarteners
in each district by comparing delinquency rates and enrollment totals.
In school districts with the most delinquent kindergarteners in the
2024-25 school year, the latest data available from the state, as much
as 44% of their kindergarteners were delinquent in the measles vaccines,
and their delinquencies also outnumbered exemptions, which was not the
case at the state level. Those school districts had vaccine delinquency
rates as small as a fraction of a percent just five years prior.
The five other vaccinations required for kindergarten followed similar
increases in delinquency rates during the same time period.
The pandemic is the driving force behind the increase in vaccine
delinquency, school district officials say. Many children are entering
school after falling behind on their immunizations during the pandemic,
making it an untenable task for resource-strapped school districts to
chase after parents to vaccinate their children or submit an exemption.
Meanwhile, access to vaccines, especially free and low-cost doses, have
also dwindled over the last several years amid funding cuts and the
politicization of vaccines.
State laws and rules don’t dictate who has to enforce vaccine
compliance, although the Texas Department of State Health Services
administers the law and school districts have traditionally been among
the first line of enforcement.
While school districts acknowledge they are enrolling students not
compliant with state vaccine requirements, district officials say they
are caught in a no-win situation. Pushing vaccines too hard could lead
to retaliation from groups and politicians opposed to vaccine mandates,
and district officials don’t want to disenroll students — public schools
have a responsibility to educate all children and so much of their
funding is tied to attendance, too.

“We encourage our school nurses to advocate strongly to promote and
protect public health at their campus,” Becca Harkleroad, executive
director of the Texas School Nurse Organization. “But ultimately it’s up
to the superintendent and the principal to decide how strictly they are
going to enforce it or if they are going to enforce it.”
Statewide, the percentage of kindergarteners who were delinquent in
getting the measles vaccine more than doubled to 2.68% between 2019-20
and 2024-25, the latest data available. The delinquency rate jumped to
3.1% in 2021-22, surpassing the number of students who had an exemption.
Those rates have not returned to pre-pandemic levels, although the
exemption rate has returned to exceeding the delinquency rate.
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that a
year ago 25,000 Texas kindergarteners were not fully vaccinated against
measles. Of those, more than 16,000 had an exemption, and about 9,000
did not have an exemption and under the state’s definition, were vaccine
delinquent.
The overall vaccine delinquency rates may be small, but anything that
causes vaccination levels to fall means more children are vulnerable.
Ideally, schools try to keep their vaccination levels at 95% to help
protect those children with compromised immune systems or medical
conditions that keep them from being vaccinated.
In addition to vaccine delinquency, the state also tracks the percentage
of students who are vaccinated, formally exempt from vaccinations, and
provisionally enrolled because of vaccination status.
Most unvaccinated students in Texas are permitted to enroll because they
have an exemption form or a note from a doctor. They can also
provisionally enroll without proving vaccination status if they are
homeless, military dependents or in foster care and their records cannot
be obtained by the start of the school year.
The Texas measles kindergarten vaccination rate of 93% is the lowest
it’s been since at least 2011, ranking the state 18th nationally.
“The decrease in vaccination rates overall is certainly a concern
because it leaves our population vulnerable to different infections,”
said Dr. Erin Nicholson, a pediatric infection physician at Texas
Children’s Hospital and an assistant professor at Baylor College of
Medicine. “And we saw that front and center with the measles outbreak
that recently happened.”

Schools: A first line of defense against infectious disease
By the time most children enter kindergarten, they have received two MMR
vaccination doses, which will provide lifelong protection against
measles, as well as mumps and rubella for most people. The MMR
vaccination for kindergarteners is considered one of the most important
immunization targets by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services.
State health officials audit school vaccination records each year for
accuracy, by sampling school district records, explains Chris Van Deusen,
spokesperson for the Texas Department of State Health Services. But
there is nothing in state rules that requires DSHS to enforce the
vaccination requirement.
As a result, the de facto enforcement has traditionally fallen to school
districts.
Some of the state’s highest kindergarten measles delinquency rates were
in larger school districts and charter networks: KIPP Texas Public
Schools (44%), Spring ISD (30%), Austin ISD (23%), Dallas ISD (20%), and
Houston ISD (7%).
The five public school systems with the highest counts made up more than
half of all delinquent kindergartners in the state, despite enrolling
less than 10% of the state’s public school kindergarteners.
Some district officials, including Dallas, say they try to follow state
requirements by sending home students who do not have completed
vaccination requirements or an exemption. But, they enroll those
students, contributing to the district’s vaccine delinquency rate.
The Austin school district will also enroll the students who don’t meet
vaccine requirements, but they wait to send those students home until
their parents have been notified of their vaccine delinquency three
times, Bejarano said. They can return once they have proof of
vaccination or the exemption form.
State data doesn’t track how many vaccine-delinquent students school
districts send home. It also doesn’t reflect changes to vaccine
delinquency later in the year because the data is based on surveys
school districts submit in the first half of the school year.
While some school districts say they try to send home students who don’t
meet vaccine requirements, Houston ISD officials said they are keeping
those students in the classroom. They, too, dedicate time and resources
to track all students’ vaccination status and try to communicate
information with parents about the need for staying up to date on the
schedule.
But, they are “not excluding students from learning based on vaccine
status,” according to a statement to the Tribune.

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 Chanthini Thomas, a school nurse who
retired from her job at Houston ISD’s Bellaire High School last
summer, said the conflicting messages from the district, resource
reductions and the yearlong chase to get vaccine paperwork in was
frustrating.
“You have little support,” she said. “Why would you
say … that’s a requirement to any school for the state of Texas but
then you put out a mandate from the district to say, don’t let
immunizations prevent enrollment? And the reason is because they
need the numbers, because the numbers were dwindling.”
Like many other urban school districts, HISD is battling declining
enrollment — and the funding that comes with it — as more families
move toward better job opportunities and lower housing costs in the
suburbs or choose charter and private schools.
As school nurses have told the Tribune over the summer, school
districts choose to enroll unvaccinated children so they can keep
“butts in the seats” and the base amount of money they receive from
state and local sources to educate each student — about $6,160.
“I see the school as being in a tough spot,” said Melissa Gilkey, a
University of North Carolina professor who studies vaccine efforts
at schools. “We work so hard to minimize absenteeism … that I do
have some sympathy for that idea that it’s hard to exclude them for
one health service.”
KIPP Texas Public Schools, a charter network with campuses across
the state, declined an interview but insisted it was following the
state immunization requirements. Its kindergarten measles vaccine
delinquency rate was less than 1% in 2019 compared to 44% last year.
Spring ISD, north of Houston, reported last year that more than 30%
of its kindergarteners were measles vaccine delinquent. The district
informed the Tribune it also follows state rules closely but said
its high MMR delinquency rate was evidence of “enrollment and access
issues” and that Spring ISD was “actively working to strengthen this
process.”
The Spring district cited family’s frequent moves in the area,
limited access to health care and language barriers as reasons
there’s a delay in getting student shot records updated in time for
school.
“We are committed to improving compliance rates and ensuring our
students are protected against preventable diseases,” said Shane
Strubhart, the Spring ISD spokesperson.

Access to vaccines has dwindled
The pandemic disrupted preventive health care, becoming most
apparent in some of the most recent kindergarten classes, filled
with students born around the first COVID-19 outbreak. The COVID-19
pandemic not only interrupted home and school life, experts say, it
upended regular health checkups younger children typically receive
before they start school and that impact continues to be felt today.
Families “going to see the doctors got off track for everyone during
the pandemic,” Austin ISD’s Bejarano said.
For low-income and immigrant families who already found health care
access a challenge, more are struggling to find what Bejarano calls
their “medical” home, a regular primary care doctor who can either
vaccinate their children or answer concerns and perhaps direct them
to the state’s exemption process if they feel strong enough to opt
out.
“COVID didn’t do vaccination or education and many other things as a
whole, any favors,” said Jennifer Finley, executive director of
health services for Dallas ISD. The district’s kindergarten measles
delinquency rate jumped to 20% last school year compared to 1%
during the 2019-20 school year.
Diminished vaccine access is also a factor. Up until the early
aughts, public health departments, churches and even lawmakers would
hold free or low-cost immunization clinics over the summer for
families.
In 2004, the Dallas school district turned away hundreds of
students, who walked and drove to nearby clinics for free or
low-cost vaccines, according to a Dallas Morning News article.
After the pandemic, those resources are even fewer.
“It really stopped during the pandemic,” Finley said. “Some of the
folks lost their funding.”
Schools rely heavily on local public health departments to help them
with vaccination clinics. Once the threat of COVID lessened, public
health departments used those funds to add more staff and hold more
vaccination clinics.
But two things began impacting vaccination efforts by local health
departments. First, those leftover funds were clawed back early by
the Trump administration this year, prompting some staff to look for
other jobs, thereby causing staff shortages in public health
vaccination departments. And second, public health officials suspect
more immigrant families are shying away from vaccination because of
stepped-up immigration efforts and deportations.
In Texas, there are an estimated 111,000 immigrant children, all of
whom do not qualify for state Medicaid health insurance coverage,
attending school.

“We typically have big lines and the waiting room is packed. Our
whole lobby is packed,” Dr. Phil Huang, the director of the Dallas
County Health and Human Services Department, told the Tribune in
August. “This year it has not been that way.”
Vaccine hesitancy changing school messaging
After the pandemic, many parents watched as debates raged over the
safety of the quickly-developed COVID-19 vaccine. As a result, they
are asking more questions about all childhood vaccinations.
In many cases, parents are spreading MMR doses out and that, too,
could be the reason for more kindergartners showing up with an
incomplete vaccination status, Bejarano said.
“The main concern (among parents) is basically, ‘Am I doing the
right thing for my child, that is in their best interest and help me
understand what the risks are of these infectious diseases that
vaccines are trying to prevent,’” Nicholson, the Texas Children’s
physician, said.
Before COVID, many doctors adopted an imperial tone — “you should do
this because I’m the expert,” she said. That changed after the
pandemic. “We are looking at how we talk to these parents, because
the last thing that we want to do is come across as condescending.”
School nurses have also worked tirelessly to try to find a winning
formula to reach families of vaccine-delinquent kids. At a national
school nurse conference in Austin this summer, an entire session was
devoted to teaching nurses how to have tension-free conversations
with parents who are skeptical of vaccine requirements.
Ultimately, school nurses just want to inform parents of their two
options to stay compliant with state rules: either provide proof of
vaccination or an exemption, Bejarano said.
“We’ve made these large campaigns and we are really kind when they
register, letting them know what is the law, what the exemptions
(are),” Bejarano said. “I just think the district in general is
understanding we need to do better when it comes to public health
and getting these rates up.”
The good news, she says, is that the greater efforts made by school
nurses in the fall to try to help parents become vaccine compliant
tends to push down the high delinquency rates by the end of the
school year. Data provided to the Tribune by Austin ISD proved that
out. That 23% delinquency rate for kindergartners recorded in the
fall of 2024 fell drastically to 6% by May 2025 possibly due to the
fear produced by the measles outbreak in the months prior.
“I do think that everybody came together in the Austin community and
really did try to push for that” compliance, Bejarano said. “And I
think that’s why it helped the rate last year.”

Finley points to other lesser-known reasons complicating the
back-to-school vaccination picture. Among them, an influx of
students came to Texas from other states, many already armed with
vaccination exemptions or with incomplete vaccination histories who
are having to be re-educated about Texas requirements.
Starting Sept. 1, Texas parents can more easily obtain a vaccine
exemption form by downloading it off the state’s website, but how
that will impact the delinquency gap won’t be seen until data is
released next year.
Nicholson, Finley, Bejarano and others say they would like to see
more data that clearly explains the rising delinquency rate and how
many students who were once marked delinquent end up becoming fully
vaccinated or obtaining an exemption by the end of the year.
“Does it mean, you know, people are just struggling with paperwork?”
Nicholson said. “Or does it mean that really those vaccinations are
falling?”
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