An Increasing Number Of Families In Houston Suburbs Aren’t Vaccinating Their Kids

Style Magazine Newswire | 1/18/2019, 8:35 p.m.
While most Texas school children do get the required vaccines needed to enter school, an increasing number of parents are …

HoustonPublicMedia.org

While most Texas school children do get the required vaccines needed to enter school, an increasing number of parents are choosing not to vaccinate their children. In some areas, that trend is threatening the vaccination rates needed to keep diseases from spreading. In their latest bi-annual report, The Immunization Partnership says non-medical exemptions for school vaccine requirements in Texas are 25 times higher now than in 2003. Statewide, between 2016 and 2018, the percentage of students with exemptions rose from 0.97% to 1.07%. Advocates worry those increasing rates threaten groups of people who are unable to be vaccinated, such as children too young to be vaccinated or people who have certain medical conditions. Having enough people vaccinated keeps preventable diseases from spreading when they are introduced, an effect called herd immunity. While some families say work requirements or a lack of health insurance prevents them from vaccinating their children, others are basing the decision off of fraudulent science linking the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine to autism which was later retracted, Winnike said.