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        Persons using assistive technology might not be able to fully access information in this file. For assistance, please send e-mail to: mmwrq@cdc.gov. Type 508 Accommodation and the title of the report in the subject line of e-mail.

        Vaccination Coverage Among Children in Kindergarten --- United States, 2009--10 School Year

        Please note: An erratum has been published for this article. To view the erratum, please click here.

        Healthy People 2020 objectives include maintaining vaccination coverage among children in kindergarten (IID-10) (1). The target is ≥95% vaccination coverage for the following vaccines: poliovirus; diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis (DTP/DTaP/DT); measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR); hepatitis B (HepB); and varicella (1). Data from school assessment surveys are used to monitor vaccination coverage and vaccination exemption levels among children enrolled in kindergarten. This report summarizes data from school assessment surveys submitted to CDC by 48 federal immunization program grantees (including 47 states and the District of Columbia) for the 2009--10 school year to describe vaccination coverage and exemption rates (2). For that period, 17 grantees reported coverage of ≥95% for four vaccines (poliovirus, DTP/DTaP/DT, MMR, and HepB) and four grantees reported coverage of ≥95% for 2 doses of varicella vaccine. Total exemption rates, including medical, religious, and philosophical exemptions, ranged from <1% to 6.2% across grantees, and 15 grantees reported exemption rates <1%. Survey methods for vaccination coverage and exemption rates varied among grantees, making comparisons difficult and limiting the use of school assessment surveys to report aggregate national rates. Further standardization of school assessment survey methods will generate comparable data between grantees to monitor and track progress in reaching national objectives, and allow development of best practice guidelines for grantees to more effectively use and report school coverage and exemption data. CDC will continue to monitor vaccination coverage and exemption levels and assist grantees in identification of local areas with low vaccination coverage or high exemption rates for further evaluation or intervention.

        School vaccination requirements in the United States date back to 1855, when Massachusetts became the first state to require smallpox vaccine for school entry to control smallpox epidemics. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of school vaccination requirements in 1922.* Since 1978, vaccination levels among children entering school have been assessed annually by state and local health departments. In general, school or health department personnel review the vaccination histories of enrolled students to determine compliance with school requirements established to protect children from vaccine-preventable diseases and ensure high vaccination coverage rates as they begin school. Results of the school-level reviews are reported to the state/area health department, which then reports aggregated totals to CDC; not all grantees report both vaccination coverage and exemption levels.

        For the 2009--10 school year, vaccination coverage levels for children enrolled in kindergarten were available from 46 grantees. The number of children enrolled in kindergarten with an exemption for medical, religious, or philosophical reasons was available from 47 grantees. All of the reporting grantees assessed public schools, and all but North Dakota and Wisconsin included private schools in their assessment. Although 37 grantees assessed all schools with a kindergarten class, a smaller group (Delaware, Georgia, Hawaii, Missouri, Nevada, New Mexico, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Virginia, and Wisconsin) assessed a random sample of schools, and Alaska assessed a nonrandom sample of schools. For grantees that submitted reports for <95% of enrolled students, data were weighted based on population.

        The vaccination status of students was considered up-to-date if they had received all of the vaccine doses required for school entry in their state or area. All reporting grantees require 3 or 4 doses of poliovirus vaccine and 2 doses of MMR vaccine. School entry requirements for other vaccinations vary by state/area: 44 grantees require 4 or 5 doses of DTP/DTaP/DT, 41 grantees require 3 doses of HepB vaccine, and 25 grantees require 1 dose and 18 grantees require 2 doses of varicella vaccine. The types of exemptions and the process for obtaining exemptions also varied by grantee (3). All reporting grantees allowed medical exemptions, 43 allowed religious exemptions, and 16 allowed philosophical exemptions; two grantees (Mississippi and West Virginia) did not allow exemptions for religious or philosophical reasons. Exemption data reported to CDC are nonspecific and do not indicate whether the exemption was for one vaccine, a required vaccine dose, or for all required vaccines. Vaccination and exemption status also might not have been reported for each surveyed child because some children might have been in the process of obtaining required vaccines, as allowed by local policy.

        Excluding varicella vaccine, the number of reporting grantees with ≥95% vaccination coverage ranged from 23 (50%) grantees for 2 doses of MMR vaccine to 28 (67%) grantees for HepB vaccine (Tables 1 and 2); 17 grantees achieved ≥95% coverage for four vaccines (complete series of poliovirus, DTP/DTaP/DT, MMR, and HepB vaccines). Among the 21 grantees that monitor receipt of 2 doses of varicella vaccine, coverage ranged from 62.9% (Idaho) to 99.6% (Georgia), with 10 grantees reporting coverage ≥90% and four grantees reporting coverage ≥95% (Table 2).

        Total exemptions varied widely by grantee, ranging from <0.1% (Mississippi) to 6.2% (Washington); 15 grantees had a total exemption rate ≥3.0% (Table 3). Of the three types of allowable exemptions, medical exemptions were the least frequent, ranging from <0.1% (Mississippi) to 1.7% (Alaska). Nonmedical exemptions ranged from 0.2% (Rhode Island) to 5.8% (Washington) among the 45 grantees that allow nonmedical exemptions.

        Reported by

        Shannon Stokley, MPH, Carol Stanwyck, PhD, Bob Avey, Stacie Greby, DVM, Immunization Svcs Div, National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, CDC. Corresponding contributor: Shannon Stokley, sstokley@cdc.gov, 404-639-8734.

        Editorial Note

        Findings from this report showed that, in general, coverage rates for most recommended vaccines among children entering kindergarten were ≥90%; however, some grantees were below the Healthy People 2020 target of ≥95% coverage. Maintaining high MMR vaccination coverage rates, particularly among preschool children (>90% 1-dose coverage) and school-aged children (>95% 2-dose coverage), is essential to maintain measles elimination in the United States (4). However, only 50% of grantees reported that >95% of kindergartners surveyed had received 2 doses of MMR vaccine.

        This is the first report of exemption data from the school assessment surveys. Overall exemption rates were low. Monitoring exemptions is important because several measles outbreaks in recent years occurred among school-aged children who were eligible for vaccination but whose parents chose not to have them vaccinated (5,6). For the majority of grantees, exemptions for medical reasons were <1%, and <3% for nonmedical reasons. Although the low exemption rates are reassuring, data in this report were aggregated at the grantee level, preventing analysis at the local or school level. Previous studies have shown that exemptions tend to cluster geographically and within schools (5,7); therefore, areas with high exemption levels might exist, even in states that have a low overall exemption rate, thereby creating pockets of undervaccinated children vulnerable to an outbreak of vaccine-preventable illness. Because reported exemptions do not distinguish between an exemption for one vaccine versus all vaccines, a student with a claimed exemption could have received one or more vaccines. Previous studies have found that exemptions to all vaccines are less common; a recent study of 277 children with nonmedical vaccine exemptions residing in four states found that 209 (75%) had received at least one vaccine (8). Additionally, vaccination coverage estimates from the 2009 National Immunization Survey showed that <1% of infants aged 19--35 months had not received any vaccines (9). Continued monitoring of exemption rates at the state and local school level will be important to determine if rates increase over time and to identify areas of undervaccination that will need evaluation or intervention.

        The findings in this report are subject to at least three limitations. First, the variation of required vaccinations and assessment methods among kindergarten children across grantees and over time limits comparability of data. Second, data included in this report are a cross-sectional representation of vaccination coverage and exemption rates at one point in time; therefore, students who were in the process of obtaining required vaccines or claiming an exemption, as allowed by local policy, might not be accounted for in the reported estimates. Consequently, vaccination coverage and exemption rates might be underestimated for some grantees (the level of unaccounted for students ranges from 0% to 17.5%). Finally, the reasons why some parents seek vaccination exemptions could not be determined because reported data are limited.

        CDC has been working with state immunization programs to 1) improve their school assessment survey methods to evaluate their vaccination programs, 2) identify local areas of undervaccinated children, and 3) standardize reporting of data to allow valid state comparisons and national estimates. For example, CDC has provided a standardized, online reporting system since the 2002--03 school year (2). CDC also is partnering with grantees to achieve greater standardization of reporting, including asking them to report coverage for a similar timeframe each year and report coverage based on Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) vaccination recommendations, in addition to reporting coverage based on state/area requirements. CDC has funded a national survey to assess state/area practices and will develop best practices for collecting and reporting vaccination coverage and exemption data.

        School vaccination requirements are essential to protect kindergarten students from vaccine-preventable diseases and are recommended as an evidence-based strategy by the Task Force on Community Preventive Services to improve vaccination coverage levels (10). School vaccination assessments can identify pockets of undervaccination and help focus public health strategies where they can be most effective. This report underscores the need for standardized school assessment reporting to support public health activities, ensure valid comparisons of coverage rates across states, and develop valid national estimates to monitor progress toward achieving Healthy People 2020 objectives.

        References

        1. US Department of Health and Human Services. Healthy people 2020: immunization and infectious diseases. Washington, DC: US Department of Health and Human Services; 2010. Available at http://www.healthypeople.gov/2020/topicsobjectives2020/overview.aspx?topicId=23. Accessed May 26, 2011.
        2. CDC. The school entry immunization assessment report, 2009--10. Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2010. Available at http://www.cy118119.com/vaccines/stats-surv/schoolsurv/default.htm. Accessed May 26, 2011.
        3. Rota JS, Salmon DA, Rodewald LE, Chen RT, Hibbs BF, Gangarosa EJ. Processes for obtaining nonmedical exemptions to state immunization laws. Am J Public Health 2001;91:645--8.
        4. Gay NJ. The theory of measles elimination: implications for the design of elimination strategies. J Infect Dis 2004;189(Suppl 1):S27--35.
        5. Sugerman DE, Barskey AE, Delea MG, et al. Measles outbreak in a highly vaccinated population, San Diego, 2008: role of the intentionally undervaccinated. Pediatrics 2010;125:747--55.
        6. CDC. Update: measles---United States, January--July 2008. MMWR 2008;57:893--6.
        7. Omer SB, Enger KS, Moulton LH, Halsey NA, Stokley S, Salmon DA. Geographic clustering of nonmedical exemptions to school immunization requirements and associations with geographic clustering of pertussis. Am J Epidemiol 2008;168:1389--96.
        8. Salmon DA, Moulton LH, Omer SB, deHart MP, Stokley S, Halsey NA. Factors associated with refusal of childhood vaccines among parents of school-aged children. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2005;159:470--6.
        9. CDC. National, state, and local area vaccination coverage among children aged 19--35 months---United States, 2009. MMWR 2010;59:1171--77.
        10. CDC. Vaccinations to prevent diseases: universally recommended vaccinations. In: Guide to community preventive services. Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2011. Available at http://www.thecommunityguide.org/vaccines/universally/index.html. Accessed April 13, 2011.

        * Zucht v King, 260 US 174 (1922).

        Two states report vaccination coverage levels but do not have requirements for school entry (varicella [2 doses] in Idaho; hepatitis B in South Dakota). One state (Nevada) assesses vaccination coverage for 2 doses of varicella vaccine, but the number of doses required varies by school district.


        TABLE 1. Number and percentage of federal immunization program grantees* reporting ≥90% and ≥95% vaccination coverage among children enrolled in kindergarten, by vaccine --- United States, 2009--10 school year

        No. reporting

        Reporting ≥90% coverage

        Reporting ≥95%coverage

        Vaccine

        No.

        %

        No.

        %

        Poliovirus

        46

        42

        91

        26

        57

        DTP/DTaP/DT§

        46

        40

        87

        25

        54

        MMR

        46

        40

        87

        23

        50

        Hepatitis B

        42

        39

        93

        28

        67

        Varicella (1 dose)

        23

        23

        100

        21

        91

        Varicella (2 doses)**

        21

        10

        48

        4

        19

        Abbreviations: DTP = diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and pertussis; DTaP = diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis; DT = diphtheria and tetanus toxoids; MMR = measles, mumps, and rubella.

        * Includes 45 states and District of Columbia.

        Healthy People 2020 objective IID-10 has a vaccination coverage target of ≥95% for children in kindergarten.

        § Two grantees report coverage for ≥3 doses, 44 grantees report coverage for 4--5 doses.

        Among the reporting grantees, South Dakota does not require the vaccine for school entry.

        ** Among the reporting grantees, Idaho does not require the vaccine for school entry and Nevada requires differing numbers of doses depending on the school district.


        TABLE 2. Estimated vaccination coverage among children enrolled in kindergarten, by vaccine and state/area --- United States, 2009--10 school year

        State/Area

        Vaccine

        Total kindergarten population

        Surveyed* (%)

        Poliovirus (%)

        DTP/DTaP/DT (%)

        MMR (%)

        Hepatitis B (%)

        Varicella

        1 dose (%)

        2 doses (%)

        Alabama

        75,358

        100.0

        94.0

        94.0

        94.0

        ---

        96.8

        ---

        Alaska

        9,641

        76.4

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        Arizona

        89,287

        93.9

        95.5

        95.0

        95.0

        96.8

        97.5

        ---

        Arkansas

        34,733

        100.0

        98.0

        97.5

        98.3

        98.5

        98.3

        ---

        California

        507,191

        100.0

        93.6

        93.1

        93.6

        96.1

        96.6

        ---

        Colorado

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        Connecticut

        46,158

        100.0

        98.3

        98.5

        98.5

        98.4

        98.4

        ---

        Delaware

        11,327

        9.2

        89.4

        89.6

        89.7

        88.9

        ---

        89.0

        District of Columbia

        6,092

        100.0

        91.2

        89.8

        96.9

        96.3

        ---

        90.6

        Florida

        218,630

        100.0

        91.3

        91.3

        91.3

        91.3

        ---

        91.3

        Georgia

        141,949

        1.2

        100.0

        99.9

        99.6

        100.0

        ---

        99.6

        Hawaii

        18,427

        6.4

        95.2

        94.8

        95.0

        95.1

        96.2

        ---

        Idaho

        22,624

        100.0

        92.8

        86.8

        87.0

        93.0

        ---

        62.9

        Illinois

        165,845

        100.0

        95.8

        95.6

        94.5

        ---

        96.5

        ---

        Indiana

        84,390

        94.7

        92.9

        91.1

        92.8

        95.2

        96.0

        ---

        Iowa

        42,698

        100.0

        84.5

        84.5

        84.5

        84.5

        ---

        84.5

        Kansas

        39,073

        39.1

        97.9

        97.1

        90.9

        97.0

        ---

        85.3

        Kentucky

        56,526

        92.9

        94.1

        93.2

        92.2

        93.0

        NA

        ---

        Louisiana

        53,846

        100.0

        98.9

        98.0

        96.9

        98.0

        ---

        93.7

        Maine

        14,162

        75.3

        95.4

        96.2

        95.5

        ---

        95.9

        ---

        Maryland

        75,061

        75.0

        99.8

        99.6

        98.9

        99.7

        99.5

        ---

        Massachusetts

        74,476

        100.0

        92.9

        92.4

        93.0

        97.7

        98.6

        ---

        Michigan

        129,810

        100.0

        96.6

        96.0

        95.3

        97.3

        97.3

        ---

        Minnesota

        70,653

        100.0

        94.8

        94.3

        95.1

        96.4

        ---

        94.0

        Mississippi

        46,922

        100.0

        99.7

        99.7

        99.7

        99.7

        ---

        99.7

        Missouri

        75,958

        3.0

        98.1

        97.1

        97.3

        97.4

        98.8

        ---

        Montana

        12,335

        98.8

        96.9

        96.7

        95.5

        ---

        ---

        ---

        Nebraska

        29,607

        96.4

        98.7

        98.7§

        97.5

        97.5

        97.2

        ---

        Nevada

        35,209

        5.6

        98.7

        97.9

        94.5

        98.0

        ---

        76.5

        New Hampshire

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        New Jersey

        118,347

        95.1

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        New Mexico

        26,318

        2.2

        99.3

        99.0

        97.6

        99.1

        ---

        94.9

        New York

        229,273

        100.0

        98.4

        98.3§

        97.6

        98.3

        98.4

        ---

        North Carolina

        116,087

        96.0

        97.3

        97.2

        97.3

        98.2

        98.3

        ---

        North Dakota

        8,323

        6.0

        92.2

        90.8

        92.2

        92.6

        ---

        89.6

        Ohio

        ---

        ---

        88.3

        87.9

        88.6

        90.5

        91.2

        ---

        Oklahoma

        51,128

        88.9

        97.6

        97.3

        97.3

        99.5

        99.7

        ---

        Oregon

        44,676

        100.0

        94.3

        93.9

        94.4

        95.0

        95.2

        ---

        Pennsylvania

        149,656

        100.0

        94.4

        90.8

        86.9

        93.5

        NA

        79.4**

        Rhode Island

        11,818

        11.6

        90.1

        90.3

        92.1

        92.8

        ---

        86.9

        South Carolina

        53,725

        10.2

        87.7

        86.7

        87.2

        87.6

        91.0

        ---

        South Dakota

        11,499

        100.0

        97.8

        97.9

        96.8

        94.7

        ---

        97.7

        Tennessee

        90,811

        88.1

        97.4

        97.4

        97.4

        97.4

        97.4

        ---

        Texas

        381,425

        98.3

        98.1

        97.7

        98.1

        98.6

        ---

        96.8

        Utah

        49,957

        100.0

        97.9

        97.5

        97.7

        98.6

        99.3

        ---

        Vermont

        6,713

        100.0

        92.1

        91.8

        91.8

        94.8

        ---

        88.2

        Virginia

        100,891

        4.4

        99.1

        98.4

        92.1

        97.6

        98.3

        ---

        Washington

        81,511

        93.3

        91.8

        91.6

        91.7

        92.8

        ---

        88.6

        West Virginia

        22,730

        86.7

        91.5

        91.9

        91.2

        92.0

        ---

        88.4

        Wisconsin

        61,095

        2.3

        98.2

        97.3

        94.2

        97.4

        ---

        90.3

        Wyoming

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        Abbreviations: DTP = diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and pertussis; DTaP = diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis; DT = diphtheria and tetanus toxoids; MMR = measles, mumps, and rubella; NA = not available.

        * The proportion of eligible children for whom vaccination and exemption data were collected.

        Vaccine not required for school entry.

        § Reported estimate is for 3 doses of DTP/DTaP/DT.

        Unable to calculate; state did not report the total number of students enrolled in kindergarten.

        ** State requires 1 dose for school entry but could only report coverage for 2 doses.


        TABLE 3. Number and percentage of children enrolled in kindergarten who had a reported exemption* to vaccination, by type of exemption and state/area --- United States, 2009--10 school year

        State/Area

        Medical exemptions

        Nonmedical exemptions

        Total exemptions

        No.

        (%)

        Religious

        Philosophical

        Total

        (%)

        No.

        (%)

        Alabama

        91

        (0.1)

        282

        ---

        282

        (0.4)

        373

        (0.5)

        Alaska

        161

        (1.7)

        369

        ---

        369

        (3.8)

        530

        (5.5)

        Arizona

        185

        (0.2)

        ---§

        2,479

        2,479

        (2.8)

        2,665

        (3.0)

        Arkansas

        28

        (0.1)

        33

        132

        165

        (0.5)

        193

        (0.6)

        California

        998

        (0.2)

        ---§

        10,280

        10,280

        (2.0)

        11,278

        (2.2)

        Colorado

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        Connecticut

        108

        (0.2)

        387

        ---

        387

        (0.8)

        495

        (1.1)

        Delaware

        22

        (0.2)

        65

        ---

        65

        (0.6)

        87

        (0.8)

        District of Columbia

        46

        (0.8)

        20

        ---

        20

        (0.3)

        66

        (1.1)

        Florida

        697

        (0.3)

        2,100

        ---

        2,100

        (1.0)

        2,797

        (1.3)

        Georgia

        87

        (0.1)

        1,478

        ---

        1,478

        (1.0)

        1,565

        (1.1)

        Hawaii

        16

        (0.1)

        645

        ---

        645

        (3.5)

        660

        (3.6)

        Idaho

        66

        (0.3)

        68

        726

        794

        (3.5)

        860

        (3.8)

        Illinois

        1,526

        (0.9)

        5,629

        ---

        5,629

        (3.4)

        7,155

        (4.3)

        Indiana

        236

        (0.3)

        674

        ---

        674

        (0.8)

        909

        (1.1)

        Iowa

        218

        (0.5)

        359

        ---

        359

        (0.8)

        577

        (1.4)

        Kansas

        89

        (0.2)

        304

        ---

        304

        (0.8)

        393

        (1.0)

        Kentucky

        170

        (0.3)

        193

        ---

        193

        (0.3)

        363

        (0.6)

        Louisiana

        151

        (0.3)

        32

        228

        260

        (0.5)

        411

        (0.8)

        Maine

        48

        (0.3)

        11

        412

        423

        (3.0)

        470

        (3.3)

        Maryland

        236

        (0.3)

        393

        ---

        393

        (0.5)

        629

        (0.8)

        Massachusetts

        298

        (0.4)

        538

        ---

        538

        (0.7)

        836

        (1.1)

        Michigan

        858

        (0.7)

        751

        4,121

        4,872

        (3.8)

        5,730

        (4.4)

        Minnesota

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        Mississippi

        12

        (0.0)

        ---§

        ---

        ---

        (0.0)

        12

        (0.0)

        Missouri

        198

        (0.3)

        626

        ---

        626

        (0.8)

        823

        (1.1)

        Montana

        118

        (1.0)

        262

        ---

        262

        (2.2)

        380

        (3.1)

        Nebraska

        274

        (1.0)

        802

        ---

        802

        (2.8)

        1,076

        (3.8)

        Nevada

        357

        (1.0)

        357

        ---

        357

        (1.0)

        714

        (2.0)

        New Hampshire

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        New Jersey

        167

        (0.1)

        905

        ---

        905

        (0.8)

        1,072

        (1.0)

        New Mexico

        ---

        ---

        183

        ---

        183

        (0.7)

        183

        (0.7)

        New York State

        309

        (0.1)

        1,117

        ---

        1,117

        (0.5)

        1,426

        (0.6)

        North Carolina

        158

        (0.1)

        756

        ---

        756

        (0.7)

        914

        (0.8)

        North Dakota

        ---

        ---

        17

        50

        67

        (0.8)

        67

        (0.8)

        Ohio

        284

        (0.2)

        ---**

        1,515

        1,515

        (1.2)

        1,799

        (1.4)

        Oklahoma

        119

        (0.2)

        137

        319

        456

        (0.9)

        575

        (1.1)

        Oregon

        86

        (0.2)

        2,330

        ---

        2,330

        (5.2)

        2,416

        (5.4)

        Pennsylvania

        1,777

        (1.2)

        ---**

        2,924

        2,924

        (2.0)

        4,701

        (3.1)

        Rhode Island

        34

        (0.3)

        26

        ---

        26

        (0.2)

        60

        (0.5)

        South Carolina

        147

        (0.3)

        303

        ---

        303

        (0.6)

        450

        (0.8)

        South Dakota

        38

        (0.3)

        83

        ---

        83

        (0.7)

        121

        (1.1)

        Tennessee

        ---

        ---

        421

        ---

        421

        (0.5)

        421

        (0.5)

        Texas

        2,330

        (0.6)

        ---**

        2,904

        2,904

        (0.8)

        5,234

        (1.4)

        Utah

        89

        (0.2)

        22

        1,793

        1,815

        (3.6)

        1,904

        (3.8)

        Vermont

        35

        (0.5)

        13

        341

        354

        (5.3)

        389

        (5.8)

        Virginia

        159

        (0.2)

        751

        ---

        751

        (0.7)

        911

        (0.9)

        Washington

        331

        (0.4)

        168

        4,515

        4,684

        (5.7)

        5,015

        (6.2)

        West Virginia

        303

        (1.3)

        ---§

        ---

        ---

        (0.0)

        303

        (1.3)

        Wisconsin

        391

        (0.6)

        87

        1,782

        1,868

        (3.1)

        2,260

        (3.7)

        Wyoming

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        Abbreviation: NA = not available.

        * Exemption status might not be mutually exclusive of vaccination status. Children with an exemption who did not receive any vaccinations are indistinguishable from those with an exemption and also up-to-date for a given vaccination.

        Exemptions for philosophical reasons are not allowed.

        § Exemptions for religious reasons are not allowed.

        Exemptions for medical reasons are allowed but were not reported.

        ** Exemptions for religious reasons are allowed but are not reported separately from exemptions for philosophical reasons.


        What is already known about this topic?

        School vaccination requirements are essential to ensure children are protected from vaccine-preventable diseases when they enter kindergarten.

        What is added by this report?

        Among federal immunization program grantees, including 47 states and the District of Columbia, 17 reported coverage of ≥95% for each of four vaccines (poliovirus; diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis; measles, mumps, and rubella; and hepatitis B) and four grantees reported coverage of ≥95% for 2 doses of varicella vaccine. For the first time, vaccine exemption rates were reported. Total exemption rates ranged from <1% to 6.2%, and 15 grantees reported exemption rates <1%.

        What are the implications for public health practice?

        Standardizing data collection and reporting will facilitate comparison of coverage across grantees and improve priority setting for the national vaccination program. CDC will continue to monitor vaccination coverage and exemption levels over time and assist grantees in identification of local areas with low vaccination coverage or high exemption rates for further evaluation or intervention.


        Use of trade names and commercial sources is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

        References to non-CDC sites on the Internet are provided as a service to MMWR readers and do not constitute or imply endorsement of these organizations or their programs by CDC or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. CDC is not responsible for the content of pages found at these sites. URL addresses listed in MMWR were current as of the date of publication.

        All MMWR HTML versions of articles are electronic conversions from typeset documents. This conversion might result in character translation or format errors in the HTML version. Users are referred to the electronic PDF version (http://www.cy118119.com/mmwr) and/or the original MMWR paper copy for printable versions of official text, figures, and tables. An original paper copy of this issue can be obtained from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO), Washington, DC 20402-9371; telephone: (202) 512-1800. Contact GPO for current prices.

        **Questions or messages regarding errors in formatting should be addressed to mmwrq@cdc.gov.

         
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