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Fewer kids in North Texas are getting vaccinated. COVID misinformation could be to blame

COVID Vaccine AP
Mary Altaffer/AP
/
AP
The percentage of kids receiving childhood immunizations has dropped across seven counties in North Texas since 2017.

A smaller percentage of kids in North Texas are vaccinated now compared to 2017.

That鈥檚 according to data from the and a biannual report from , assessing seven counties, including Dallas, Tarrant, Denton and Collin.

In 2017, the percentage of kids in those counties vaccinated for diseases like polio, hepatitis and measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) was between 95%-96%. But in recent years, especially since the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, these numbers have dropped to between 91%-93%.

Most states require some form of vaccinations for students and young kids. At Dallas ISD, for example, have to be vaccinated against MMR, chicken pox, Hepatitis A and B and other diseases unless they have an exemption.

The percentage of conscientious exemptions to vaccinations has also been increasing in Texas over the past decade for all grade levels, according to data from the . Back in 2012, a little over 1% of kindergarten students were vaccine exempt. Now it鈥檚 more than 3.5%.

director Philip Huang said one reason is 鈥渧accines have been a victim of their own success.鈥

鈥淧eople don't see kids in iron lungs from polio anymore, but it's because of the effectiveness of vaccines,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut then it starts to get people questioning, 鈥極h, do I still need these?鈥 And absolutely, people do need the vaccines.鈥

He said the number of visitors to the county鈥檚 immunization clinics has dropped since 2020. Huang said in 2019, clinics had almost 43,000 visitors. So far in 2023, that number is closer to 27,000.

He鈥檚 concerned misinformation surrounding the COVID-19 vaccine has started to impact other kinds of immunizations.

鈥淒ifferent misinformation that's been out there has affected people's trust in some of these things,鈥 Huang said.

Ellen Fraint holds her daughter, seven-month-old Jojo, as she receives the first dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine for children at Montefiore Medical Group in the Bronx borough of New York City on Tuesday June 21, 2022.
Ted Shaffrey
/
AP
Ellen Fraint holds her daughter, seven-month-old Jojo, as she receives the first dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine for children at Montefiore Medical Group in the Bronx borough of New York City on Tuesday June 21, 2022.

National childhood vaccination trends

Kisha Davis, a family physician and board member of the , said .

鈥淭here were always pockets of the population that had concerns about vaccinations and there were certain communities who wanted to opt out,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut I think COVID raised the level of concern around vaccinations.鈥

She said unlike the newer COVID-19 vaccine, vaccines like those against .

鈥淔or generations, really, we've had vaccines as a tool in our toolbox to really help prevent and fight infection,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淲hen we look at the benefit of having vaccines, while we understand that there's some skepticism, we have years and years and years of data.鈥

She wants to remind people that childhood vaccinations prevent worse health outcomes for kids later in life.

鈥淭he HPV vaccine, the human papilloma virus, that vaccine helps prevent the virus that can cause cervical cancer,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淭hat has huge implications on the downstream effects of people's lives.鈥

Vaccinations don鈥檛 just help kids and families, she said; they improve community health outcomes overall.

鈥淲hen we think about childhood vaccines, we鈥檙e protecting that individual kid, and also we're protecting that whole classroom of kids that they are sitting together with,鈥 Davis said.

She encourages parents and families to bring questions about vaccines to their pediatrician or family doctor.

鈥淧eople get information from so many places now,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淭here's Dr. Google and social media, and it can be really hard to know what's true, what's false and what鈥檚 misinformation. Really having that trusted source, [going] back to your primary care physician, they鈥檙e the ones who can answer the question.鈥

Got a tip? Email Elena Rivera at erivera@kera.org

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Elena Rivera is the health reporter at 四虎影院. Before moving to Dallas, Elena covered health in Southern Colorado for KRCC and Colorado Public Radio. Her stories covered pandemic mental health support, rural community health access issues and vaccine equity across the region.