August is good time to check on your child's vaccinations, health officials say
Back to school time is fast approaching and state
health officials are reminding parents to make sure their children have the
benefit of being fully vaccinated against an array of potentially serious
childhood diseases. Now is the time to check with your health care provider to
make sure your child is up to date on the vaccines he or she needs to start
school.
New data released Thursday by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reaffirms that the vast majority of
children in Minnesota enter kindergarten fully vaccinated. In 2012-13, 96.1
percent of all kindergarteners had received all of the immunizations required
by Minnesota's school immunization law to protect them against
vaccine-preventable diseases. The percent of children who entered kindergarten
fully vaccinated has remained steady at about 96 percent since 2005, according
to data from the CDC and the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH).
In the 2012-13 school year, 1.6 percent of
students entering kindergarten in Minnesota were exempt from all vaccines. "It's a small group
compared to those who are vaccinated, but it still leaves the door open for a
vaccine-preventable disease to sneak in and make a child very sick or
worse," said Kris Ehresmann, director of the Infectious Disease
Epidemiology, Prevention and Control Division at MDH. "We're always
striving for 100 percent vaccination coverage."
The remaining 2.3 percent of children were
partially vaccinated at the time schools reported compliance with the
requirements. Some of these children likely went on to be vaccinated after the
date when the data were collected or they obtained a legal exemption to some,
but not all vaccines.
The importance of childhood vaccines can be
highlighted with the resurgence of pertussis (whooping cough). High vaccination
rates with DTaP, the pediatric vaccine that provides pertussis protection,
plays an important role in keeping levels of pertussis down in a community.
This past year, over 80 cases of pertussis were reported in a small Minnesota community. The outbreak started in a youth mission trip
then moved throughout the community and into the schools, affecting mostly
adolescents. Even with this significant increase in pertussis disease, the high
rates of vaccination in young children prevented spread to the younger age
groups.
"It's very reassuring to see that Minnesota has been able to maintain a high vaccination rate for our
kindergarteners," said Karen Ernst, co-founder of the Minnesota Childhood
Immunization Coalition. "I think it's important for parents out there to
know that vaccinating your child is the norm. Parents who choose not to vaccinate
are relying on the rest of us to protect their child and are leaving their
child susceptible to disease."
Having a high vaccination rate is vital for the
health of the population because it prevents disease from spreading. This is
especially important for protecting those who can't be vaccinated because of a
medical condition or who don't respond to immunization because of a weak immune
system.
For copies of your child's vaccination records,
talk to your doctor or call the Minnesota Immunization Information Connection
(MIIC) at 651-201-5503 or 1-800-657-3970. More information is also available
from The CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6230a3.htm?s_cid=mm6230a3_em
, and Minnesota Public Health Data Access, https://apps.health.state.mn.us/mndata/immunization.