Childhood vaccine exemptions have reached their highest-ever level in the United States. Health officials reported on November 9, 2023, that 3% of our nation’s kindergartners now claim exemption from school vaccination requirements.

According to the World Council for Health (WCH), people worldwide have less confidence in childhood vaccines following the failure of the COVID-19 vaccines. The WCH says in its article of September 5th, “The COVID-19 crisis has demonstrated that regulatory bodies, once public watchdogs are now, at best, incompetent and, at worst, have been deeply corrupted by pharmaceutical industry interests.”

In the years before the COVID-19 lockdown, 95% of kindergartners received their routine shots. This dropped to 93% for the 2021-2022 and 2022-2023 school years, though more students received exemptions this year. The CDC estimated that over 115,000 kindergartners claimed exemption from at least one vaccine last year. Though the percentage of kindergartners receiving medical exemptions has held steady at around .2% over the past decade, non-medical exemptions have increased from 1.6% in the 2011-2012 school year to the 3% reported last year.

The 3% represents the average of kindergartners nationwide, but the rates vary widely from state to state. Idaho had the highest rate, with 12% of kindergartners receiving at least one exemption. New York had the lowest exemption rate, at .1%. Ten states in the West and Midwest reported that over 5% of kindergartners received exemptions from at least one vaccine. Hawaii had an exemption rate of 6.4%, nearly double the previous year. Conversely, Connecticut and Maine saw reductions in kids receiving exemptions, which CDC officials attribute to policy changes that increase the difficulty of receiving exemptions.

Each of the 50 states and U.S. territories require children attending childcare and school to receive shots against diseases such as measles, mumps, polio, tetanus, whooping cough, and chickenpox. All the states claim to allow medical exemptions from the vaccines for children with medical conditions that prevent them from receiving them, and most permit religious or other exemptions. ICAN lead attorney Aaron Siri, Esq., recently won back Mississippi’s religious exemption and plans on reclaiming it for all 50 states.

Health officials in the U.S. want to see at least 95% of students vaccinated in order to prevent contagious diseases. These officials declared that the outbreak of measles of 2014-15 happened as a result of unvaccinated Disneyland guests getting the virus and then spreading it to others, even those who had received the vaccine. They blamed the 2019 measles outbreak, which reportedly affected about 1,300 people—the worst outbreak in the U.S. in nearly 30 years–, on visitors from under-vaccinated countries and on communities with low vaccination rates.

Interestingly, the national vaccination numbers remained unchanged despite the growing number of exemptions. The CDC’s Shannon Stokley attributes this paradox to the following scenario: The CDC’s statistics consist of numbers from three different groups of children. One group gets all the shots, the second gets vaccine exemptions, and the third group of children didn’t request exemptions but didn’t get all their shots and paperwork completed by the time of the data collection. “Last year,” Stokley reasoned,” those kids in that third group probably decreased.”

The number of exemptions will continue to rise, thanks to the work of Aaron Siri and ICAN. As of August 2023, Mississippi has already started accepting requests for religious exemptions for students. This monumental win for bodily freedom has paved the way for future challenges in the five remaining states that do not currently accept non-medical waivers.

Published November 28, 2023

 

Brenda Goldstein

Brenda Goldstein is a published journalist of over 20 years. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and children.

Other Headlines

Coronavirus

Investigation Reveals Dangerous Bat Studies at CSU

The White Coat Waste Project uncovered 22 wasteful, dangerous bat studies funded by tax dollars and conducted in Colorado with ties to EcoHealth Alliance.  More details regarding Colorado State University’s (CSU) dangerous virus experiments on bats have been uncovered. The White Coat Waste Project (WCWP) revealed the details of 22 experiments. The experiments include Sars, CoV, Mers, Cedar, Nipah, and Sosuga viruses.  TheContinue reading Investigation Reveals Dangerous Bat Studies at CSU

More news about Coronavirus

Health & Nutrition

Study Shows 98% Of Children Grow Out of Gender Confusion by Adulthood

A new study concludes that 98% of gender-confused children grow out of it and will become comfortable with the gender that corresponds to their birth sex by the time they reach adulthood. The age with the highest rate of gender confusion is the age of 11, which is just before the typical onset of puberty.  TheContinue reading Study Shows 98% Of Children Grow Out of Gender Confusion by Adulthood

More news about Health & Nutrition

Vaccines

AstraZeneca Faces Landmark Lawsuit for COVID-19 Vaccine Trial Injury

A lawsuit, likely the first one of its kind, was brought against AstraZeneca for breach of contract for failing to pay the medical bills for the plaintiff injured in the COVID-19 vaccine clinical trial. Brianne Dressen was officially diagnosed with “Post Vaccine Neuropathy” by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). She has had substantial, debilitating injuries from her participation in the clinicalContinue reading AstraZeneca Faces Landmark Lawsuit for COVID-19 Vaccine Trial Injury

More news about Vaccines

Science & Tech

USDA Reopens Comment Period for Deregulation of Gene-Edited Plants

The deregulation of gene-edited plants is on the USDA agenda, and the public comment period has been extended by 21 days. The comment page has yet to be posted on the Federal Register. CRISPR is a new technology that is being used in agriculture to modify plants. “New Gene Technologies” or NGTs are how big agricultural companies like Bayer areContinue reading USDA Reopens Comment Period for Deregulation of Gene-Edited Plants

More news about Science & Tech

Environment

Unpacking the Global Health Security Strategy: Surveillance, Sustainability, and “One Health” Approach

President Joe Biden announced the release of a  U.S. Global Health Security Strategy (GHSS). The synopsis of the new plan states, “The new Global Health Security Strategy articulates a whole-of-government, science-based approach to strengthening global health security.” The plan is further explained as a necessary approach to mitigate harm from future pandemics while partnering with 50 countries.  In the aftermathContinue reading Unpacking the Global Health Security Strategy: Surveillance, Sustainability, and “One Health” Approach

More news about Environment

Policy

Boy Scouts of America Rebrands for Inclusivity: Introducing ‘Scouting America’

The Boy Scouts of America have announced they will change their name to Scouting America beginning in February 2025. The announcement has been described as a new inclusive name that is welcoming to everyone who may want to join. Last September, a Netflix documentary, “Scouts Honor: The Secret Files of the Boy Scouts of America,” detailedContinue reading Boy Scouts of America Rebrands for Inclusivity: Introducing ‘Scouting America’

More news about Policy