Rural states with declining immunization rates have increasing incidence of whooping cough

In the state that once had the highest immunization rate, Vermont’s medical community is not so proud of anymore. Fewer people are vaccinating their children in the nation’s most rural state, reports Dr. Wendy Mahoney, a private practioner in the state. But Vermont isn’t alone. Stories about declining immunization have come in from across rural America, Mahoney writes in the Daily Yonder, and they “come in the midst of a pertussis outbreak the likes of which Vermont has not seen in years, if ever.” Pertussis is whooping cough.

Mahoney says she can find one reason for the recent outbreak: a new law in her state, like some in other rural states, that allows parents to exempt their children from required vaccinations “because of a personal, moral, or other belief.” Mahoney says many rural residents use the exemption, which she finds hard to fathom in the face of scientific advances that prove that vaccination has ended smallpox, wiped out polio in most of the world, and controlled measles, rubella, tetanus, diphtheria, influenza type b and other infectious diseases.


The top map shows the estimated percentage of children enrolled in kindergarten who have been exempted from receiving one or more vaccines in the 2011–12 school year. Comparison with the other map shows that states with large numbers of exemptions are those where whooping cough is making a comeback. (Centers for Disease Control maps)

A comparison between states with low vaccination coverage rates and those reporting higher numbers of whooping cough cases shows some, though not consistent, overlap. (Read more)

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One Reply to “Rural states with declining immunization rates have increasing incidence of whooping cough”

  1. Minority

    This is an odd statement: "Mahoney says she can find one reason for the recent outbreak: a new law in her state, like some in other rural states, that allows parents to exempt their children from required vaccinations "because of a personal, moral, or other belief."

    There have been exemptions in Vermont since the 1970s. Nothing new about them.

    The increases in exemptions occurred not because of a rejection of vaccination but because of new vaccines added to the schedule, specifically the chickenpox and Hepatitis B vaccines which were added in 2008.

    Exemptions do not actually mean that a child is unvaccinated. What they mean is that parents have opted out of one or more vaccines for their child. In VT, most of the exemptions are for one or two vaccines, most often the chickenpox vaccine.

    So, why is this information being misrepresented?

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