Schools

Placer County Parents Reject Vaccines at a Higher Rate Than State Average

Personal belief exemptions continue to be used by parents in Roseville and Granite Bay.

Article written by Jim Welte and Lauren Gibbs

An article in Slate earlier this month asked whether parents who decline to immunize their children should be sued or charged with a crime when their decision leads to an outbreak of illness.

The piece pointed to a 2008 San Diego incident where an unvaccinated 7-year-old boy caught measles in Switzerland and then passed the virus on to 11 other unvaccinated kids.

The Slate article comes as public health agencies across the country are reminding parents to bring proof of vaccinations when enrolling their children in school.

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In California, kindergartners need five DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis), four polio, three hepatitis B, two MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) and one varicella (chickenpox) shot.

However, California is one of 18 states where parents may still enroll students who have not been immunized if they claim an exemption due to personal beliefs. Gov. Jerry Brown signed into law last fall a bill requiring parents who exclude their children from immunization requirements to submit a signed statement that they received information about risks and benefits of vaccines.

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In doing so, however, Brown directed the state Department of Health to provide a way for people whose religious beliefs preclude vaccinations from having to seek a health care practitioner's signature.

Out of the 5,577 children who enrolled as kindergarteners in Placer County last year, nearly 9 percent started school without having received the battery of vaccinations required by the state because of the personal beliefs of their parents or guardians.

In the Dry Creek Joint Elementary School District, the three schools with the highest personal belief exemptions are located in Antelope, followed by Dry Creek Elementary in Roseville at 13 percent of kindergarteners with personal belief exemptions, according to the data. 

Within the Eureka Union School District, Greenhills Elementary School had 13 percent of kindergarteners with personal belief exemptions. 

In the Roseville City School District, Stoneridge Elementary had 10 percent and Diamond Creek at 8 percent. 

As for Roseville and Granite Bay private schools, Granite Bay Montessori had the highest, with 21 percent of kindergarteners with personal belief exemptions.

Those figures are considerably higher than the statewide average of 2.7 percent.

A study by the California Department of Public Health in 2010 found that 80 percent of parents who don't immunize their kids do so because they believe the vaccines pose a health risk.

What do you think? Should parents who decline to immunize their children be sued or charged with a crime when their decision leads to an outbreak of illness? Tell us in the comments below.


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