Measles cases are up and childhood vaccinations are down
Monday, September 2, 2024
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In this photo illustration, vials of measles, mumps and rubella vaccine are displayed on a counter at a Walgreens Pharmacy in California during an outbreak in 2015.
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For about three weeks in 2000, there were zero measles cases in the United States. It was declared eradicated.
Fast forward to 2024, and measles cases are surging, especially in Oregon where the state is facing the worst outbreak since the early 1990s.
This is happening as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that the vaccination rate among kindergartners is dropping, and more and more parents are seeking exemptions to school vaccine requirements.
People are vaccinating their children at lower and lower rates. What does that mean for kids as they head back to school, and for infectious and deadly diseases like measles?
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Copyright 2024 NPR
For about three weeks in 2000, there were zero measles cases in the United States. It was declared eradicated.
Fast forward to 2024, and measles cases are surging, especially in Oregon where the state is facing the worst outbreak since the early 1990s.
This is happening as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that the vaccination rate among kindergartners is dropping, and more and more parents are seeking exemptions to school vaccine requirements.
People are vaccinating their children at lower and lower rates. What does that mean for kids as they head back to school, and for infectious and deadly diseases like measles?
For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.
Email us at [email protected].
Transcript
JUANA SUMMERS, HOST:
For kids, back to school means new school supplies, maybe some new clothes and going to the doctor's office to get up to date on shots.
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CHERYL CHASE: (As Angelica Pickles, crying) I want my mommy.
MICHAEL BELL: (As Drew Pickles) Don't cry, sweetie. It was just a shot.
CHASE: (As Angelica Pickles) I know.
SUMMERS: Increasingly, parents are leaving that last one, routine vaccinations, off the to-do list. The CDC reported last year that the vaccination rate among kindergarteners is dropping, and more and more parents are seeking exemptions to school vaccine requirements. And in August, Gallup reported that fewer Americans overall think childhood vaccines are important compared to 30 years ago. These trends help explain why measles, a disease that the U.S. eradicated with the vaccine 24 years ago, is back with a vengeance.
PAUL CIESLAK: We had a period of about three weeks in the United States, back in the year 2000, where there were zero cases of measles.
SUMMERS: That's Dr. Paul Cieslak, a medical director at the Oregon Health Authority, speaking with Oregon Public Broadcasting last week. Right now, Oregon is facing its worst measles outbreak since the early '90s. It's also seeing a record number of vaccine exemptions for school-age kids across the state.
CIESLAK: Many of the people can get out of the requirement by choosing an exemption and going through the process. It was 8.8% this past February, so that's the highest we've ever seen, and that's probably enough for us to see sustained measles transmission.
SUMMERS: CONSIDER THIS - people are vaccinating their children at lower and lower rates. What does that mean for kids as they head back to school and for infectious and deadly diseases like measles?
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SUMMERS: From NPR, I'm Juana Summers.
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SUMMERS: It's CONSIDER THIS FROM NPR. Fewer and fewer kids are getting vaccinated. At the same time, infectious diseases like measles are surging. Here to talk about why childhood vaccinations are on the decline and what's at stake this school year is Dr. Steven Furr. He's a family physician in Jackson, Ala., and the president of the American Academy of Family Physicians. Welcome.
STEVEN FURR: Thank you. Glad to be with you.
SUMMERS: Dr. Furr, if I can, I want to start by talking about the measles outbreaks that we have been seeing this year. The state of Oregon, for example, is facing its largest outbreak since 1991, and if I understand correctly, this disease was eradicated in the United States back in 2000. So help us understand, why are measles cases surging in some states right now?
FURR: Yeah, the thing you have to realize - a lot of these viral illnesses, they're all different, but measles is very infectious, and about 94 to 95% of people either have had to have a measles infection or be vaccinated to have herd immunity. So therefore, you only have to have 4% or 5% of people to not be immunized for an outbreak to occur. So most of these outbreaks, about 86% of them, have been patients who are unvaccinated, who their vaccination status is unknown. And the problem with measles is they can get severely ill. Almost 60% of measles patients under 5 years of age get hospitalized. So generally, children get two measles vaccines. They get one when they're 12 months of age, and then they get another one usually before they go back to school. So it's so important that they get both of those vaccinations in.
SUMMERS: What do you think it is that's leading some of these parents to choose not to vaccinate their children? If I understand, most of these emerging cases of measles have been in people under 19. Is it that they've just perhaps forgotten how bad measles once was in this country?
FURR: Yeah, I think that's a great point, because, you know, people in this generation have been very fortunate. They've never seen a lot of these diseases, so they really don't know what they're like. So when I was growing up, my grandmother had polio, so I knew what it was like, and she had a deformed leg because of that. When they offered me a polio vaccine, I didn't hesitate to get it. And, you know, when I was in residency, we had an infection called haemophilus influenzae that often affected children. It would give them ear infections, but they would sometimes get meningitis, and they would get an epiglottitis, which is a swelling of their airway, which means they would have to be hospitalized and sometimes even intubated. Well, since that vaccine has come out, I haven't seen a case of that in almost 25 years. So I think part of it, people don't realize how severe some of these infectious diseases can be. And I think we take for granted even the flu. People say the flu is real common, it's been around a long time, but we forget how many people are hospitalized and die from the flu every year.
SUMMERS: Since the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, there has been poll after poll after poll that shows that Americans' confidence in vaccines is waning. You're on the front lines here. What do you think is behind these trends?
FURR: I think it was a lot of disruption during COVID. Offices were often closed. They couldn't get into their family physician or their primary care physician, so I think a lot of it, they lost the habit of going and doing that. And now I think part of that is in our health care system now, they might go to urgent care for some of their acute problems rather than going to their family physician's office or their pediatrician's office. So at those places, they don't think about immunization. So I think the biggest thing is to get families associated with their family physician or pediatrician, where they can talk about the immunizations. Granted, immunizations, it can be very complex, both for kids and for adults. There's a lot of different immunizations that protect against various diseases, so it's real important for them to discuss with their family physicians what they need and what really will protect them.
SUMMERS: Another thing that I wonder about is false information that's out there, misinformation about vaccines that parents and caregivers might be encountering that gives them pause. As a physician, how do you fight that, or can you?
FURR: Yeah, I mean, I just talk with them and try and reassure them. I talk to them about the consequences of not getting the vaccine, that the vaccines have, of course, been well studied. We've gone through rigorous processes. I think some people got a little bit nervous because they thought the COVID vaccines were rushed, but actually, there was probably more science in that, that actually some form of that vaccine had been around for a long time, the actual process. So it was just because we put all of our might into doing that and focusing on it that we were able to get there, and it's really a miracle that we were able to get those kind of vaccines that quickly. So that technology, though, has been around. It's not something that's new. So I think one way you reassure them - when the COVID vaccine came out, I told them, hey, I've taken it, my mother's taken it, my wife's taken it, my mother-in-law's taken it. So if I think it's safe for them and for me, I think it's safe for you.
SUMMERS: You've mentioned a couple of reasons why people aren't getting vaccinated - the breakdown in well care for children, but also a lack of exposure to the effects of serious viral illnesses. I'm struggling to reconcile this for myself because, I mean, as a country, we have all just had the experience of living through a pandemic where people were dying in huge numbers before there was a widely available vaccine. Do you have an explanation for how that didn't make a bigger difference in attitudes toward vaccination?
FURR: Yeah, I think you've got to realize, when you look at the history of vaccinations - just like when COVID vaccine came out and everybody was thinking the uptake was going to be 80%, 90%, I knew that wasn't realistic 'cause we've been doing the flu vaccine for years and we never got over 45% of people get vaccinated. So there is a hesitancy about vaccine in many different communities. You know, you could go back to the concern about the government and the fact that this might have been sponsored by the government and got started. And you go back to the Tuskegee experiment - there's just some concern in communities. But the best way to get people immunized is to have their personal relationship with their family physician. And I can tell you, the way I get so many people immunized is the spouse will be in with her husband, and he comes in, and I'm saying, do you want to get your flu shot? And he says yes, and then the spouse - I'll say, do you want to get yours while you're here? And they'll say yes. So a lot of times it's just a matter of the physician asking them, and then when they ask and have concerns, then you can talk and address about those concerns.
But, you know, it's really interesting 'cause, you know, I'll see a family, and the husband will have taken the COVID vaccine. The wife adamantly refuses. So if the husband's not going to convince her, the wife's not convinced the husband other way around, I'm probably not, but the most important thing is just to keep that relationship with a patient, and over time, some of them will change their mind. But some of it, I think, is just denial. Denial is a protective psychological defense we all have, and you'll think, everybody else will get this, but I'll never get it.
SUMMERS: We've been talking a good deal about vaccine hesitancy, but there's another factor that can contribute to lower vaccination rates that we should get into, and that's access, because over the past few years, we've been seeing physician shortages all over this country. There have been pharmacy closures. And I have to imagine that you're seeing this where you are, too, given that health care infrastructure is not always as robust in rural areas of this country. Do you think that right now it is harder for people to get vaccines, in your view?
FURR: I think it depends on when you talk about it. I mean, you know, years ago, none of the pharmacists gave vaccines, so you had to go to the doctor's office. So there is more availability. I think our public health structure probably is not as strong as it used to be, where they have the ability to ramp up and vaccinate a lot. But I think the coverage for kids is actually very good. Either they've gotten insurance, or even if they don't have insurance, every state has the Vaccines for Children program that they can get where they're underinsured or uninsured together. They get that totally for free. So our clinic does that. So that's sponsored through the health department through our state Medicaid, so even if they don't have insurance, they can get that for free. Now, for adults, sometimes it can be a problem if they don't have insurance, so we would like to have something like the Vaccines for Adults, just like we have for kids, so that we would be able to get them covered also.
SUMMERS: Some of the trends that we've been talking about in terms of childhood vaccination rates may be concerning to some listeners. So I want to ask you, as a physician, what brings you hope when you think about the role that you and your colleagues play in both keeping kids healthy but also helping to prevent the spread of disease?
FURR: Yeah, I think it gives us a good opportunity to really talk about vaccinations 'cause people for many years kind of took them for granted and really didn't think about what they did and what they prevented. And the ability to prevent diseases - I mean, it's amazing. We've got the ability, with the HPV vaccine, to give this to teenagers so they'll never have cervical cancer. I mean, that's an incredible opportunity there. So that ability to prevent disease is better now than it's ever been.
SUMMERS: Dr. Steven Furr is a family physician in Jackson, Ala., and he's also the president of the American Academy of Family Physicians. Dr. Furr, thank you.
FURR: Thank you. Great to talk with you.
SUMMERS: This episode was produced by Kathryn Fink. It was edited by Courtney Dorning. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun. And one more thing before we go - you can now enjoy the CONSIDER THIS newsletter. We still help you break down a major story of the day, but you'll also get to know our producers and hosts and some moments of joy from the All Things Considered team. You can sign up at npr.org/considerthisnewsletter.
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SUMMERS: It's CONSIDER THIS FROM NPR. I'm Juana Summers. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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