Schools

No Shot, No School: Whooping Cough Gets Tough on Local Students

A new law passed in response to California's largest outbreak of pertussis (whooping cough) in 65 years is making a tough sell: no shot, no school.

Though most students are more focused on spring break than back-to-school, health officials want you to know you won't be allowed back next August without a jab.

With vaccination season in swing, many parents and districts are scrambling to prepare for a new law that would require students to get an additional pertussis (whooping cough) vaccine before returning to school in the fall. 

In September of 2010, then Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed into a law a bill that would require all entering 7th to 12th grade students to receive a Tdap booster—the sixth in the series—before returning for the 11-12 school year.

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That bill came in response to a massive outbreak of whooping cough that killed 10 and sickened nearly 10,000,  the largest occurrence of the disease in California in 65 years. 

According to a California Department of Public Health report released early last month, more than 500 California cases have been reported since January.

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But according to a CDC report released Thursday, 80 cases were reported in the last week of March alone.  A dozen more were reported the following week.  

Much of the blame for the outbreak has been laid with parents who used California's "personal belief exemption" to avoid vaccinations for their children.

Because "exempters" (as they're called in public health circles) tend to cluster—mostly in white, affluent communities—the overall immunity rate of the community becomes depressed.

According to a by San Lorenzo Patch, south Alameda county's diversity may be its best protection.

According to several experts, heavily immigrant communities tend to fear infectious disease more than potential risks from vaccines, most of which scientists and health experts say are unfounded. 

"We see big differences in the ethnic community the parents are coming from," said Dr. Arnd Herz, head of pediatrics at Kaiser Permanente Hayward, at the height of the outbreak in October. "We take care of a large immigrant population, and by and large most immigrant populations very much believe in the power of vaccines. They have seen deaths from infectious diseases, which is not something the average person in the Bay Area has seen."

As we wrote last fall, most districts in the south county had only a tiny handful of personal belief exemptions last year. 

By contrast, Albany and Berkeley had rates of 3 and 5 percent, respectively. (To view vaccination rates by school, click here).

Across the Bay in Marin County, the exemption rate exceeds 7 percent. So far, caseloads have tended to reflect this trend.

But another startling trend emerged in last year's mini-epidemic. 

The rate of infection was highest in the Latino community, where attitudes toward vaccination tend to be positive. 

Health experts believe that lack of access to care, including vaccines, may have been to blame. 

That's why Alameda County health care providers want you to know, its easy to get the booster for free if you haven't had it. 

The Alameda County Public Health Department will provide free Tdap immunizations at the Family Justice Center, 470 27th St., Oakland, on Thursday, April 21 and Thursday, April 28.

Free vaccines will also be sponsored by Remote Area Medical at the Oakland Coliseum on Monday, April 11 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.


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