The vast majority of US kindergarten-age children are vaccinated against preventable diseases but sizable pockets of unprotected children still exist, posing a public health threat, according to a government study.
Only 1.7 per cent of US parents of kindergarteners sought exemptions in 2014 from laws requiring children be vaccinated, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study.
Rates vary nationwide, however, with at least one state reporting over six per cent of parents seeking exemptions, the study released Thursday found.
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Lawmakers in at least 10 states including California are making efforts to tighten school vaccination exemption rules after a measles outbreak at Disneyland in Anaheim sickened more than 100 people earlier this year.
All states require a schedule of vaccines that a child must have before he or she can be enrolled in school. Every state allows exemptions from vaccines for medical reasons, and all but Mississippi and West Virginia allow exemptions for religious reasons.
Because US measles vaccination rates are high, at 94 per cent among kindergarten-age children, the Disney outbreak was less of a problem than in Canada, Schuchat said.
"We were lucky in the US. We didn't see large outbreaks in schools," she said, adding that in one province in Canada, there were more than 100 measles cases from the Disney exposure "because of a big pocket of undervaccinated people."
High vaccination rates provide herd immunity, preventing the spread of a virus to individuals too young or too sick to be vaccinated.
According to the report, which included data on 45 states that met reporting requirements and the District of Columbia, the median rate of kindergartners with any exemption was less than 1 per cent in six states and greater than 4 per cent in 11 states.
Mississippi reported the lowest rates of vaccine exemptions with a median of 0.1 per cent, while Idaho reported the highest at 6.5 per cent.
Schuchat said she was encouraged that states increasingly are making vaccination coverage information available to residents online, with as many as 21 states doing so in the current reporting period.
Parents can use that data to check on vaccination coverage in their own communities and schools, depending on how the state reports the data, she said.