vaccine rates – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Fri, 05 Sep 2025 22:14:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png vaccine rates – 社区黑料 32 32 Confusion as Kids Head Back to School and RFK Jr. Calls the Shots on Vaccines /article/confusion-as-kids-head-back-to-school-and-rfk-jr-calls-the-shots-on-vaccines/ Thu, 04 Sep 2025 12:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1020302 Updated, Sept. 4

Eleven of 12 Democratic Senate Finance Committee members called on Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to resign Thursday just before a charged 鈥 and at times explosive 鈥 committee hearing with the embattled health secretary.

Committee Democrats and two Republicans, both of them physicians, accused Kennedy of peddling misinformation, pressuring officials to rubber stamp policies not based on science and making it harder for Americans to access COVID vaccines. Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Washington, called Kennedy a charlatan.

Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colorado, said he was questioning Kennedy on behalf of 鈥減arents and schools and teachers all over the United States of America who deserve so much better than your leadership.鈥

Sen. Maggie Hassan, D-New Hampshire, accused the secretary of denying parents the right to vaccinate their children against COVID.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e making things up to scare people,鈥 Kennedy loudly interrupted. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 a lie.鈥

Kennedy defended his running of HHS, which was thrust into turmoil after his decision last week to fire the Senate-confirmed Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director, issue confusing new COVID vaccine guidelines and cut funding for mRNA vaccine research, among other contentious moves. A number of committee Republicans applauded Kennedy for his work, noting he had reduced spending and shifted the agency鈥檚 focus to 鈥減romoting prevention first.鈥

During a moment that appeared to confuse senators, Kennedy said he had fired former CDC head Susan Monarez because he asked her, 鈥淎re you a trustworthy person?鈥 and she replied, 鈥淣o.鈥 Several in response cited Monarez鈥檚 claim that that she鈥檇 sign off on forthcoming recommendations from a newly installed vaccine committee. Kennedy refuted these claims and repeatedly accused Monarez of lying.

He also appeared to double down on his assertions that childhood vaccines and autism are linked, citing

Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minnesota, attempted to push the secretary on his past statements: 鈥淲hen were you lying, sir? When you told this committee that you were not anti-vax, or when you told Americans that there鈥檚 no safe and effective vaccine?鈥

鈥淏oth things are true,鈥 he replied.


Kids are heading back to school this fall as the country experiences some of the lowest childhood vaccine rates and highest levels of public health uncertainty in known memory.

Amid the swirling currents: the defunding of vaccine research and competing messaging around COVID shots for children; a rare federal attempt to influence a West Virginia legal battle over childhood vaccine exemptions; and a dramatic leadership struggle within the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that could solidify more power in the hands of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 

Kennedy is seen by many as the destabilizing figure at the center of the chaos, and 2025-26 will be the first full school year that the longtime vaccine skeptic is in charge of childhood public health. The controversial secretary, who earned a this week from every one of his predecessors going back to the Carter administration, is scheduled to testify before the Senate Finance Committee later today.


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Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-Louisiana, who heads the Senate health committee and played a pivotal role in Kennedy’s confirmation, has of the CDC amid the turmoil, citing children’s health as his major concern.

On Wednesday, three West Coast governors announced they鈥檇 be forming to establish their own vaccine recommendations, protesting those of the CDC, which, they said in a statement, 鈥渉as become a political tool that increasingly peddles ideology instead of science, ideology that will lead to severe health consequences.鈥

The governors of California, Oregon and Washington said the alliance will 鈥渆nsure residents remain protected by science, not politics.鈥 Meanwhile, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and his surgeon general announced their intention Wednesday to become , including for schoolchildren.

As the states splintered on vaccines, 1,000 current and former HHS staff released formally calling for Kennedy鈥檚 resignation, writing that he 鈥渃ontinues to endanger the nation鈥檚 health.鈥 The group condemned a series of actions including the of the Senate-confirmed CDC director, Kennedy鈥檚 refusal to be briefed by CDC experts on vaccine-preventable diseases and his 鈥渕isleading claims鈥 about physician and hospital liability for following vaccine guidance that he opposes.

They also denounced the Food and Drug Administration鈥檚 recent of emergency use authorization for COVID vaccines, which 鈥 alongside the the CDC鈥檚 newest recommendations 鈥 will likely make it significantly harder for children, especially those under 5 years old, to access the shots. Recently released FDA memos show its vaccine chief overruled staff scientists who, citing high hospitalization rates among young children with COVID, recommended a wide range of age groups continue to get the vaccine, according to .

All of this, partnered with Kennedy鈥檚 long history of disseminating scientific misinformation, including the debunked claim that vaccines can cause autism, has led to great confusion for parents just as their kids are returning to school. Kennedy has promised to later this month, which he said would expose 鈥渨hat the environmental toxins are that are causing” autism.

鈥淭here is a lot of inaccurate information right now coming from the highest levels of HHS,鈥 said Kawsar Talaat, physician and associate professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, whose research focuses on vaccines. 鈥淚 would think that for family members, who don’t necessarily have expertise, it would be hard to know who to trust, and it will certainly contribute to a decline in vaccination rates.鈥

Indeed, during the 2024-25 school year, immunization rates among kindergarteners across the country decreased for all reported vaccines, according to the latest available . Rates for the measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine fell to 92.5% from approximately 95% pre-pandemic. And of states had MMR vaccination rates below the 95% needed for herd immunity, with some, like Idaho at 78.5%, well below it. 

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

As these numbers were falling, exemptions to mandatory vaccines for school-aged kids were on the rise, increasing to 3.6% nationally, driven by non-medical exemptions and up from in the 2019-20 school  year. Seventeen states 鈥 spiking from pre-pandemic 鈥 reported exemptions exceeding 5%, threatening herd immunity.

Lynn Nelson is the president of and has seen this uncertainty and hesitancy firsthand.

鈥淲e get a lot of families who are confused,鈥 she said, “who may have immunized children until this point and now are having second thoughts about it.鈥

Increasingly, conflicted parents are bringing messages they鈥檝e heard from HHS or Kennedy himself to their school nurses, wondering why they contradict what they鈥檝e historically been told by their pediatricians.

Lynn Nelson is the president of The National Association of School Nurses.(National Association of School Nurses)

鈥淚t tends to be things like, 鈥淲ell, it sounds like maybe autism is caused by [vaccines]. We want to wait and see,鈥欌 Nelson said. 

But as these parents hold off on immunizing their kids, communities remain at heightened risk for infection and outbreak, she added.

And even if medical providers are able to fight the misinformation and have conversations with parents that ultimately lead them to want to vaccinate, some kids might not be able to access the shots, amid funding cuts to public health vaccination clinics in rural areas. 

Vaccine hesitancy also plays out at the district level, since school system leaders are 鈥渏ust as susceptible to misinformation as anyone else鈥 and they often make the decision on whether or not to enforce the policies requiring most children be vaccinated in order to attend school, Nelson said. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 a question for most of us probably of when 鈥 not if 鈥 there鈥檚 going to be an outbreak.鈥

Chaos and pushback at the CDC

An already anxious back-to-school season for mandatory immunizations was intensified by the firing of CDC head Susan Monarez on Aug. 27, and her subsequent refusal to leave the post, following a clash over vaccine policy, according to reporting by  

Monarez鈥檚 lawyers her removal was 鈥渓egally deficient,鈥 and said, 鈥渢he attack on Dr. Monarez is a warning to every American: Our evidence-based systems are being undermined from within.鈥

She has since been replaced by who has no medical training and, during the pandemic, posted conspiracy theories on social media and voiced support for unproven treatments 鈥 such as ivermectin, according to reporting by Before being appointed as acting head of the CDC, O鈥橬eill served as a HHS deputy to Kennedy.

At least four other powerful agency leaders some with claiming they were asked to participate in an unscientific vaccine recommendation process. 

In response, CDC employees 鈥 a “clap out” protest to show support for their departing colleagues. An August investigation by revealed how badly the department has been depleted under Kennedy, with at least 20,500 total HHS workers gone since January, including at least 15% of all CDC staff.

Last week鈥檚 high-profile exodus comes after a tumultuous month: On Aug. 20, over 750 employees of the CDC and other health agencies signed a rare , imploring Kennedy to stop spreading misinformation. The authors argued his rhetoric contributed to an attack earlier that month on their headquarters by a gunman who fired more than onto the agency’s main campus and appeared to be, at least in part, motivated by COVID

鈥淗ealth and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., is complicit in dismantling America鈥檚 public health infrastructure and endangering the nation鈥檚 health by repeatedly spreading inaccurate health information,鈥 the letter reads. The authors accused Kennedy of sowing public mistrust in the CDC鈥檚 workforce; firing critical workers; making false and dangerous claims about mRNA and measles vaccines; and misusing data to falsely claim childhood vaccines are the cause of autism.

HHS did not respond to requests for comment on the confusion surrounding vaccine policies nor on the allegations that inaccurate information is coming out of the agency, eroding faith in its work.

In response to mounting criticism, Kennedy published an op-ed in this week, arguing he was, 鈥渞estoring public trust in the CDC,鈥 which had been destroyed by 鈥渂ureaucratic inertia, politicized science and mission creep.鈥

鈥淲e have shown what a focused CDC can achieve,鈥 he wrote, citing and defending his response to the measles outbreak, which he said, 鈥渨as neither 鈥榩ro-vax鈥 nor 鈥榓ntivax.鈥欌

He identified six areas of focus, including investing in the workforce, that he wrote will 鈥渞estore the CDC鈥檚 focus on infectious disease, invest in innovation, and rebuild trust through integrity and transparency.鈥

The American Academy of Pediatrics recently signaled its lack of confidence by filing a alongside a number of other health care organizations, arguing Kennedy had violated federal law and made 鈥 unscientific changes to federal vaccine policy鈥 by moving to curb COVID vaccines for young children. The plaintiffs include an immunocompromised mother to two teenage boys who were denied COVID vaccines.聽

They鈥檝e also issued their own guidance, the COVID vaccines for all young children. Kennedy responded to this move on X, calling it a 鈥渓ist of corporate-friendly vaccine recommendations鈥 and 鈥減erhaps, just a pay-to-play scheme.鈥

Last week, the Food and Drug Administration approved updated COVID vaccines, but with new restrictions: they鈥檒l only be available to people 65 and older or younger people with at least one underlying medical condition that increases their risk for severe disease. In a post on Kennedy said the Moderna vaccine had been approved for use in those older than 6 months, Pfizer in those older than 5 years and Novavax in those older than 12 years.

鈥淭hese vaccines are available for all patients who choose them after consulting with their doctors,鈥 he wrote, though it鈥檚 still not clear who will have the shots

While healthy children and adults without underlying conditions were eligible to receive the vaccine historically, HHS claimed, 鈥淭oday鈥檚 decision does not affect access to these vaccines for healthy individuals.鈥 

鈥淗HS is not limiting access,鈥 a department spokesperson wrote to 社区黑料. 鈥淭he COVID vaccine remains available for anyone who chooses it in consultation with their healthcare provider.鈥

In response to a request for clarification to determine if this means children and healthy adults under 65 can access the vaccine with permission from a doctor, the agency spokesperson just repeated the same language.

All of this back and forth has contributed to confusion for parents, as increase in many areas of the country. Recent by KFF, a nonpartisan, nonprofit health policy organization, found that half (48%) of parents are not sure if federal health agencies are currently recommending that healthy children receive a COVID vaccine this fall or not.

A federal push for vaccine exemptions

While many eyes are on the debate surrounding COVID vaccines, researchers and physicians also remain laser focused on measles, following this year鈥檚 outbreak, which infected over across 41 states and killed two unvaccinated children. 

Case numbers this year are already the they鈥檝e been since the disease was declared eradicated in the U.S. in 2000. Some 92% of reported infections have involved a person who was unvaccinated or whose status was unknown and 13% have resulted in hospitalization.

Throughout the outbreaks, Kennedy has the severity and has been in his support of the MMR vaccine.

In a recent and highly unusual move for the federal government, Kennedy expressed his support for a philosophical and religious exemption to mandatory vaccines for school-aged kids in West Virginia. 

Up until a recent opened the door for broader exemptions, the state had some of the nation鈥檚 strictest childhood vaccination policies and was one of only five that exclusively allowed for medical exemptions. Already around 500 requests for religious and philosophical exemptions have been submitted 鈥 and approved 鈥 for the 2025-26 school year, according to records obtained by 社区黑料, though those numbers are not yet reflected in the CDC鈥檚 data.

According to that data, Georgia and Michigan saw exemptions rise faster than any other state 鈥 by 1.2 percentage points year-over-year 鈥 driven almost exclusively by non-medical exemptions. They were closely followed by Idaho, Pennsylvania, South Dakota and Utah.

In West Virginia, conflict between the governor鈥檚 order and current state law has and over how officials should proceed. Beginning on Aug. 21, the federal government publicly weighed in, apparently attempting to tip the scales. 

First, HHS鈥檚 Office for Civil Rights sent to all West Virginia health departments participating in the federal which provides vaccines to millions of kids who otherwise wouldn鈥檛 be able to afford them. The communication stated that if they did not comply with the governor鈥檚 executive order, they would no longer be eligible to participate in the program. 

Richard Hughes, a George Washington University law professor and leading vaccine law expert, called this move an unheard-of 鈥渋mplied threat.鈥

鈥淚 just think that鈥檚 got to be unprecedented for a federal agency 鈥 the Office for Civil Rights 鈥 to go and pick out a state law and say, 鈥榊ou need to comply with that.鈥 That just boggles my mind,鈥 Hughes said.

鈥淲hat I worry about is that we鈥檙e about to see a push at the federal and the state level encouraging religious exemptions,鈥 he added.

Hours after Kennedy testified before the Finance Committee, the Office for Civil Rights announced they had issued similar letters to all states participating in the Vaccines for Children program stating they “must respect state religious and conscience exemptions from vaccine mandates.”

Earlier, the health secretary had posted on , voicing his support for the West Virginia governor and urging state legislators to comply.

Caitlin Gilmet, communications director for American Families for Vaccines, speaks with lawmakers at the Maine State House. (Caitlin Gilmet)

Del Bigtree, CEO of the, an anti-vaccine advocacy group, told 社区黑料, 鈥淲e’re happy that Robert Kennedy Jr. and HHS are supporting Gov. Morrissey. I think this is a pivotal moment for this conversation in this nation.鈥

Other states have joined West Virginia in pursuit of such bills, according to Caitlin Gilmet, the communications director for , a pro-vaccine advocacy organization formerly called SAFE Communities Coalition.

鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing medical freedom bills in a number of states. Idaho, Montana, Tennessee, Texas, Florida are all kind of national bellwethers where those parental rights bills are being tested,鈥 she said. 

Kids in those states are particularly vulnerable to 鈥渘ew exemption policies, weak enforcement and then the conditions to create exemption clusters,鈥 she added, which can then lead to outbreaks.

A number of these types of bills contain language or policies that are unclear, leading to more confusion and conflicting guidance. 

Further complicating the issue is Kennedy’s recent firing of all members of the group responsible for making recommendations on the safety, efficacy and clinical need for vaccines to the CDC as well as the cancellation of $500 million in federal grants to mRNA vaccines, the technology used to develop the COVID vaccination. 

Kawsar Talaat is a physician and associate professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. (Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health)

In a post on , he claimed the vaccines are ineffective and cause 鈥渕ore risks than benefits,鈥 while 鈥減aradoxically鈥 prolong[ing] pandemics as the virus constantly mutates to escape the protective effects of the vaccines鈥 鈥 assertions that are echoed by activists like Bigtree, yet have been widely debunked by researchers and medical professionals.

鈥淚t is incredibly misleading, not to mention just false, to say that the vaccines are more harmful than they are beneficial,鈥 said Talaat, the Johns Hopkins professor. 鈥淭hey are incredibly beneficial. They’ve saved millions of lives.鈥

While COVID vaccines were the first on the market to use mRNA technology, others were in development before the funding cancellation, including ones to fight cancer and bird flu.

鈥淸Bird flu] could be the next pandemic,鈥 Talaat said, 鈥渁nd they canceled the contracts to create mRNA vaccines against this virus.鈥

鈥淚t’s really important,鈥 she added, 鈥渢hat people understand that, unfortunately, this is not a time where we can trust those in the highest positions of power at HHS.鈥

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New Research: Childhood Vaccination Rates Drop Across 1,600 U.S. Counties /article/new-research-childhood-vaccination-rates-drop-across-1600-u-s-counties/ Fri, 06 Jun 2025 10:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1016596 Correction appended June 17

Childhood vaccination rates have markedly declined across the U.S. since the start of COVID, according to new Johns Hopkins University showing 78% of more than 2,000 counties reported drops and the average immunization rate had fallen to 91% 鈥斅爁urther below the 95% threshold needed for herd immunity.

While existing Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data has historically shown broadly declining measles-mumps-rubella vaccination rates at the state and national levels, the county-level analysis published this week in JAMA is far more granular.


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It provides a 鈥渂etter understanding of these pockets where you have more exceptionally high risk,鈥 said senior author Lauren Gardner, the director of Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering.

Lauren Gardner is the director of Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering and senior author of the research. (Johns Hopkins University)

鈥淜nowing where there are problem areas,鈥 she added, 鈥済ives policymakers and public health professionals locations to target their limited resources to try and improve vaccination coverage and therefore minimize the potential risk of measles outbreaks.鈥

The country is currently experiencing a deadly measles outbreak that has infected over people across 30 states and killed two unvaccinated children. Case numbers this year have already surpassed 2024鈥檚 total and mark the second-highest number of confirmed cases in a year since the disease was declared eradicated in the U.S. in 2000. Some 96% of reported infections have involved a person who was unvaccinated or whose status was unknown and 13% have resulted in hospitalization.

Gardner, who also led the data collection efforts behind , and her team collected county-level, two-dose MMR vaccine rates for kindergarteners from each state’s department of health website from 2017 to 2024, where available. Ultimately, they were able to analyze trends in 2,066 counties across 33 states and made all their data available to download.

While state level average rates may decline by a few percentage points, the researchers found 130 counties where they dropped by at least 10 percentage points, and in 15 of those counties, they plummeted more than 20.

Only four of the states studied 鈥 California, Connecticut, Maine and New York 鈥 reported an increase in the median county-level vaccination rate. They are currently the only four states that exclusively allow medical 鈥 and not philosophical or religious 鈥 exemptions to mandatory vaccines for school-aged children.

Gardner said she pursued the county-level data after observing growing vaccine hesitancy and misinformation. Based on her years of work in the field, she said she was 鈥100% expecting to see [these current outbreaks].鈥 

If vaccination rates continue to drop 鈥渕easles is likely to return to endemic levels in the US,鈥 according to the Johns Hopkins鈥 report 鈥 a concern other experts see as heightened by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. now heading the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services. A well-known vaccine skeptic, Kennedy initially the measles spread in late February and has been in his support of the MMR vaccine.

Under Kennedy鈥檚 leadership, the Trump administration released the controversial 鈥淢ake America Healthy Again鈥 on May 22, which misinterpreted studies, and is suspected of being generated in part . The report, which involved , questions the safety and importance of some childhood vaccines.

鈥淒espite the growth of the childhood vaccine schedule,鈥 the report reads, 鈥渢here has been limited scientific inquiry into the links between vaccines and chronic disease, the impacts of vaccine injury, and conflicts of interest in the development of the vaccine schedule.鈥 

Paul Offit, the director of the Vaccine Education Center at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and a professor of pediatrics at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, pushed back on these assertions.

Paul Offit is the director of the Vaccine Education Center at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and a professor of pediatrics at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine. (Children鈥檚 Hospital of Philadelphia)

The issue has been well studied, and there is no evidence of links between childhood vaccines and chronic diseases 鈥 including diabetes and autism 鈥 said Offit, who is also member of the Food and Drug Administration鈥檚 Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee.

He referenced 24 studies across seven countries and three continents involving thousands of children that show they鈥檙e at no greater risk of developing autism if they receive the MMR vaccine.

Current skepticism is not isolated to the measles vaccine: The Food and Drug Administration, which falls under HHS, recently released which no longer recommends the COVID vaccine for healthy children or pregnant women. In response, a top COVID vaccine adviser at the CDC resigned this week, according to reporting from  

And across the country, numerous states have introduced legislation to loosen vaccine requirements for school-aged children, opening the door for more parents to opt their kids out.

鈥淚 think this is only going to get worse,鈥 Offit said. 鈥淚 think vaccines are under attack. You have a secretary of Health and Human Services who will do everything he can during the years that he is in that position to make vaccines less available, less affordable and more feared. 鈥 So I think this is a dangerous time to be a child in the United States of America.鈥

Correction: In a previous version of this story, we incorrectly characterized Dr. Paul Offit鈥檚 status on the CDC鈥檚 Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. He is a former voting member of the CDC鈥檚 advisory committee and a current member of the FDA鈥檚 vaccine advisory committee.

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