1. Characteristics Associated With Measles, Mumps, and Rubella Coverage and Exemptions After a School Immunization Law Change in Washington, 2019‐2020.
- Author
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Moore, Tyler, Graff, Katherine, and Bell, Teal R.
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VACCINATION policies , *MEDICAL protocols , *RESEARCH funding , *DATA analysis , *MMR vaccines , *VACCINATION , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *PUBLIC sector , *HEALTH policy , *HELP-seeking behavior , *PARENT attitudes , *CHI-squared test , *INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *VACCINATION coverage , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *LONGITUDINAL method , *ODDS ratio , *VACCINE hesitancy , *STUDENT health , *MEDICAL records , *ACQUISITION of data , *STATISTICS , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *DATA analysis software , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *VACCINATION status ,SCHOOL health service laws - Abstract
BACKGROUND: We aimed to better understand the impact of statewide legislation removing personal belief exemptions (PBEs) for the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) school immunization requirement and factors associated with resulting health‐seeking behaviors. METHODS: We used chi‐squared tests and logistic regression models to determine individual‐ and school‐level characteristics associated with holding a MMR PBE and with post‐law MMR immunization status among students linked to the Washington State Immunization Information System. RESULTS: Of students with a MMR PBE pre‐law change, 43.0% completed the MMR vaccine series and 40.4% sought another exemption type. Religious exemptions made up most new MMR exemptions signed (71.8%), followed by medical exemptions (18.5%), and religious membership exemptions (9.7%). Students were more likely to complete the vaccine series post‐law change if they attended a school with a low school‐level MMR exemption rate, a public school, or held a lower number of school‐required immunization exemptions. CONCLUSIONS: This study confirms previous concerns that parents might replace their PBE with another exemption type; however, nearly half the students in the cohort completed the MMR vaccine series. Our findings suggest that targeted immunization policies can increase MMR coverage 1‐year post‐law change but must account for a replacement effect when exemption categories are eliminated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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