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More Parents Opting Out of School Vaccinations, Citing Religious Objections

Since COVID, there's been an increase in the number of parents not getting their kids vaccinated for diseases such as chicken pox, measles and polio.

Kids line up to be fed at a summer camp in Pinellas Park, Fla.
Children at a summer camp in Florida.
Dylan Townsend/TNS
With schools set to start in a couple of weeks, most parents of kindergartners are working to make sure to get required vaccinations for their children before sending them off to school.

But not all parents. Over the last decade, more parents have opted their children out of vaccination requirements through the use of nonmedical religious exemption – especially in recent years following the COVID-19 pandemic.

The number rarely rises above a percent or two of an incoming kindergarten class, typically accounting for no more than a couple hundred children per year. But that means that in the years since 2002, a total of more than 10,000 kindergartners have attended public and private schools without vaccination records, according to historical data from the Maryland Department of Health.

The rising percent of religious exemptions in recent years may point to increasing rates of vaccine hesitancy among families, said Daniel Salmon, a professor and director of the Institute for Vaccine Safety at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

“We’ve seen a post-COVID increase,” Salmon said. “With COVID … things got really polarized with more misinformation and disinformation. Vaccinations became a very political topic. And that’s not helpful.”

Maryland law requires that children have a handful of vaccinations when they enter kindergarten, in order to protect themselves and their classmates from transmissible diseases, such as measles, polio and chickenpox, among others. Children can be exempted if there is a medical reason they cannot receive a vaccine or a religious restriction against it.

The process to invoke the religious exemption in Maryland is simple. Parents can just sign a form that says: “Because of my bona fide religious beliefs and practices, I object to any vaccine(s) being given to my child.”

Elizabeth Elliott, president of the Maryland Association of School Health Nurses, said she understands the need for exemptions, but she said it is also important that as many children as possible be vaccinated.

“Herd immunity is really important for those of us – kids, staff members, families – in a school community that, for medical reasons, can’t be vaccinated,” Elliott said. “It’s incumbent upon the rest of use to vaccinate ourselves and our children to protect those of use who can’t have the vaccine because it’s unsafe.”

But tracking vaccine hesitancy is a tricky task, according to Salmon, and there are many factors that contribute to why some families don’t get their kids vaccinated.
Vaccine exemptions chart
Chart: Danielle J. Brown • Source: Maryland Department of Health • Created with Datawrapper

“It’s really hard to answer that question based on data, based on how you measure vaccine hesitancy,” he said. “So the best measure we have is the proportion of children entering school who have a nonmedical exemption.”

The earliest data readily available from the state is from the 2002-2003 school year, in which 0.2 percent of kindergartners got a religious exemption, or about 126 kids out of roughly 63,000 entering kindergarten that year.

The rate increased steadily over the years: Ten years later, for example, about 0.6 percent of kids had religious exemptions, resulting in about 419 kids not receiving vaccinations in 2012-2013.

Religious exemptions spiked in 2019-2020 when 2.7 percent of kindergartners, or 1,641 kids, opted out of vaccination requirements. The COVID-19 pandemic went into full swing in the spring of 2020, so those families would have opted out prior to the the rise in cases in the United States.

Since the 2021-2022 school year, at least 1 percent of kindergartners in Maryland had a medical exemption — a couple hundred a year.

While the percent and numbers have increased, Salmon believes the numbers are not rising high enough for major concern.

“It’s a pretty small number,” he said. “I guess it’s a big increase by percentage, it’s a fair number of kids, but the absolute numbers are fairly small.”

He also noted that a state average does not tell the entire story of vaccine hesitancy.

“It’s also misleading because the exemptions tend to cluster geographically, socially, and the state average can can’t capture that social, geographical cluster issues,” he said.

In the last school year, there were higher concentrations of religious exemptions in some of Maryland’s more rural counties. The highest rate of religious exemptions were in Worcester (4.21%) and Cecil (3.75%). But Baltimore City also ranked high for religious exemptions, at 2.05% of kindergartners.
Vaccine exemptions map
Map: Danielle J. Brown • Source: Maryland Department of Health • Created with Datawrapper

Maryland tends to fall behind the national average of religious exemptions, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2022-2023, the national average for nonmedical exemption was 2.8 percent of kindergartners, compared to Maryland’s 1.4 percent for that year.

Salmon notes that there are many factors since the pandemic that have led to more parents seeking out exemptions from vaccination requirements.

“There’s not a simple answer. It’s a mixture of people not being aware of the diseases … people worried about the safety of vaccines, often full of misinformation and disinformation,” he said. “We need to do a better job of communicating to parents more broadly, listen to people’s concerns and be empathetic and address them with the best available science.”

Elliott added that there are other underlying reasons why some families seek a religious waiver.

“What I often see now is families signing the religious objection because it’s too difficult to get to their children their vaccines … It’s not surprising to hear, ‘Well, I just couldn’t get to the clinic.’ So they just signed the religious waiver,” she said, noting that this issue gets more common in middle school.

Elliott agreed with Salmon that the best way to reach families who are hesitant about vaccinating their kids is to be is to be understanding and respectful. She said that as a school nurse, it is part of her responsibility to help families understand why vaccines are important for health and safety in a school setting.

“We are the ones that will view the records and ensure compliance and reach out to families,” she said. “It is a state requirement that students are immunized. And we spend lots and lots and lots of time picking up the phone and having those conversations, politely and respectfully, informing those parents.”



This article was published by Maryland Matters. Read the original here.
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