logo
Vaccination rates of U.S. kindergartners down, measles cases up

Vaccination rates of U.S. kindergartners down, measles cases up

UPI21 hours ago
A MMR vaccine information packet is seen at City of Lubbock Health Department in Lubbock, Texas, in March. According to an update from the Texas Department of State Health Services on Friday, there was was an outbreak of measles in the South Plains region of Texas where 146 cases were identified as of late January. New CDC data shows that vaccination rates are down in the United States. Photo by Annie Rice/EPA-EFE
July 31 (UPI) -- Vaccination rates among U.S. kindergarten students decreased during the 2024-2025 school year, according to data released Thursday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the District of Columbia.
Rates ranged from 92.1% for diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis to 92.5% for measles, mumps and rubella. Vaccination rates for polio and varicella dropped in more than half of the states compared to a year prior, the data show.
"The number of kindergarteners attending school without documentation of completing the MMR vaccine series was about 286,000 during the 2024-2025 school year," the report said. Overall, the number of kindergartners exempt from one or more vaccines during the 2024-2025 school year reached nearly 138,000, the data showed.
The drop in vaccination rates comes amid an uptick in the number of measles cases in the United States. There have been 29 reported outbreaks in 2025, compared with 16 in 2024.
Of 1,156 cases reported so far this year, 87% of them have been confirmed, compared to 198 of 285 confirmed cases, or 69%, in 2024.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What Is Lyme Disease? The Symptoms of Justin Timberlake's Diagnosis
What Is Lyme Disease? The Symptoms of Justin Timberlake's Diagnosis

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

What Is Lyme Disease? The Symptoms of Justin Timberlake's Diagnosis

Originally appeared on E! Online Justin Timberlake is holding a mirror up to a misunderstood illness. On July 31, the 'Can't Stop the Feeling' singer shared that he has been diagnosed with Lyme disease, admitting that his world tour was made difficult by his ongoing health issues. 'I don't say [this] so you feel bad for me but to shed some light on what I've been up against behind the scenes,' the 44-year-old shared in a vulnerable Instagram post. 'If you've experienced this disease or know someone who has—then you're aware: living with this can be relentlessly debilitating, both mentally and physically.' And while the *NSYNC alum—who shares kids Silas, 10, and Phineas, 4, with wife Jessica Biel—said he was initially 'shocked' by the diagnosis, it ended up making a lot of sense. 'At least I could understand why I would be onstage,' Timberlake explained, 'and in a massive amount of nerve pain or, just feeling crazy fatigue or sickness.' Though the symptoms vary, according to the Center of Disease Control, the debilitating disease—caused by a tickborne infection—affects over 400,000 people, including celebs like Justin Bieber, Bella Hadid and Avril Lavigne. Keep reading for everything to know about the condition… More from E! Online Bachelor Nation's Madison Prewett and Husband Grant Troutt Share Plans to Spank Their Daughter Tom Selleck, 80, Looks Unrecognizable During Rare Outing Without Signature Mustache How Sixteen Candles' Jami Gertz Became the Richest Woman in Hollywood What is Lyme disease? Lyme disease starts as an infection from a blacklegged tick bite, but can progress if left untreated into a more serious chronic illness, per the CDC. What are Lyme disease symptoms? Initially, Lyme causes a rash, fever, chills and headaches. However, if left untreated, the disease can sometimes evolve into chronic Lyme disease, which can cause fatigue, body aches, or difficulty thinking. Other later stage symptoms include facial droopiness, joint pain, nerve pain, dizziness or shortness of breath. While the symptoms vary, many celebrities have shared that they are debilitating. "I wasn't me anymore,' Tommy Hilfiger's daughter Ally described of her side effects in her 2016 memoir Bite Me. 'I was a weakly projected image of myself on a wall, crying out for someone to help me and figure out what was wrong.' For Shania Twain, the diagnosis impacted her ability to sing. 'My voice was never the same again,' Twain said in Shania Twain: Not Just A Girl in 2022, noting she got Lyme disease while horseback riding in 2003. 'There were seven years where I could not, for example, yell out for my dog. My voice would just cut out in certain places.' How is Lyme disease diagnosed? Lyme disease is difficult to diagnose once it has hit its chronic state. Indeed, Shania admitted that even doctors couldn't determine the source of her vocal problems at first. 'It took another several years to determine what it was,' she described. 'It wasn't anything obvious. Nobody connected the Lyme disease to it. In the end, a neurologist finally connected that it was the nerve to each vocal cord.' However, doctors are able to determine if a patient has Lyme disease through blood tests several weeks after an infection has started by searching for Lyme antibodies. How do you treat Lyme disease? Initial Lyme disease infections can be treated by antibiotics. After Lyme disease becomes chronic, flare ups can arise from stress or pushing your body too hard, according to Global Lyme Alliance, which recommends monitoring symptoms daily to adjust behavior based on how you feel to keep symptoms at bay. What celebrities have been diagnosed with Lyme disease? In addition to Justin Timberlake, stars that have opened up on Lyme disease include Anwar Hadid, Yolanda Hadid, Riley Keough, Amy Schumer, Avril Lavigne, Alexis Ohanian, Ryan Sutter and Ben Stiller. Back in 2020, Justin Bieber detailed his own health while slamming criticism about his appearance.'I've recently been diagnosed with Lyme disease,' Bieber wrote at the time. 'Not only that but a case of chronic mono which affected my skin, brain function, energy and overall health.' Meanwhile, Bella Hadid admitted that she had '15 years of invisible suffering' amid her battle with chronic Lyme disease. 'Living in this state, worsening with time and work while trying to make myself, my family and the people who support me, proud, had taken a toll on me in ways I can't really explain,' the model wrote in a 2023 Instagram post. 'The universe works in the most painful and beautiful ways but I need to say that if you are struggling—it will get better.' Alec Baldwin, for his part, described it as one of the scariest periods of his life. 'I really thought this is it, I'm not going to live,' he shared at LymeAid, the Bay Area Lyme Foundation's gala, in 2017. 'I was lying in bed saying, 'I'm going to die of Lyme disease' in my bed and 'I hope someone finds me and I'm not here for too long.'' Kelly Osbourne was also diagnosed with the disease after being bitten by a tick that came from a reindeer. For more than a decade, Kelly suffered from 'traveling pain,' she wrote in her 2017 memoir, a sore throat and stomachaches. Lyme disease is just one illness celebrities have opened up about, keep reading for more stars who have shared insight into private health struggles.. Lupita Nyong'o's Uterine FibroidsSuki Waterhouse's HerniaBrian Austin Green's Perforated AppendixAdam Devine's Long-Term Injury From Childhood AccidentJason Tartick's Back InjuryMatt Kirschenheiter's Heart AttackTracy Morgan's Medical EmergencyChristy Carlson Romano's Eye InjuryAmy Schumer's Cushing SyndromeCasey Fitzgerald's Neck Injury From Hockey Skate BladeHailey Bieber's Blood ClotJustin Bieber's Ramsay Hunt SyndromeJamie Foxx's Brain Bleed & StrokeEmilia Clarke's Brain AneurysmCori Broadus's StrokeShailene Woodley's Health Battle For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App Solve the daily Crossword

HHS further constrains certain vaccine advisers to the CDC, limiting their input in evidence reviews
HHS further constrains certain vaccine advisers to the CDC, limiting their input in evidence reviews

CNN

timean hour ago

  • CNN

HHS further constrains certain vaccine advisers to the CDC, limiting their input in evidence reviews

In a further jolt to the process of reviewing and recommending vaccines at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, another group of outside advisers to the agency was abruptly sidelined this week. In an email sent late Thursday evening, which was obtained by CNN, members of roughly 30 medical and public health organizations who serve as liaison members of the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, were told they could no longer participate in the committee's crucial workgroups. Liaison members don't vote at ACIP's public meetings on vaccine recommendations, but they can participate by asking questions and commenting on presentations. Behind the scenes, they have also historically done important work undertaking detailed evidence reviews of the safety and effectiveness of vaccines that helps to inform the group's votes. Those reviews happen in subcommittees called workgroups. As of late last year, ACIP had 11 active workgroups. In addition to studying scientific research, workgroups consider issues of public health importance like what age groups might get the most benefit from a vaccine, what an immunization costs and whether it will be accessible to people who should get it. Workgroups also help craft the language of the recommendations that are voted on by the full committee. Votes are typically held during ACIP's three public meetings each year. If ACIP approves a recommendation, it's forwarded to the CDC director for consideration. The director isn't bound by the committee's recommendation but usually follows it. Liaisons include groups like the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Pharmacists Association. Members also represent nurses and public health officials, typically groups that play a significant role in delivering vaccinations. The latest move comes more than a month after US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. removed all 17 voting members of ACIP, replacing them days later with eight of his own picks, many of whom have cast doubt on the safety of vaccines and public policy around vaccination. One member later dropped out during the required financial review. The email sent Thursday called the liaison members 'special interest groups' that are 'expected to have a 'bias' based on their constituency and/or population they represent.' 'It is important that the ACIP workgroup activities remain free of any influence from any special interest groups so ACIP workgroups will no longer include Liaison organizations,' the email said. Andrew Nixon, director of communications for HHS, said in a statement Friday that 'Under the old ACIP, outside pressure to align with vaccine orthodoxy limited asking the hard questions. The old ACIP members were plagued by conflicts of interest, influence and bias. We are fulfilling our promise to the American people to never again allow those conflicts to taint vaccine recommendations.' Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University who has been participating in ACIP for 40 years as both a voting member and a liaison member, said the move to exclude professional organizations from the process of making vaccine recommendations was shortsighted. 'The organizations have a certain ownership in the recommendations because they participate,' Schaffner said. That participation increases buy-in from different stakeholder groups, which helps ACIP recommendations become the accepted standards of medical practice. Without that participation, Schaffner said, there's a risk that groups will make their own vaccine recommendations, which could lead to conflicting and confusing advice. In fact, some outside organizations, including the Vaccine Integrity Project, have already started the process of making independent vaccination recommendations. Shaffner said he also takes issue with the idea that liaison representatives are biased, which he says implies a conflict of interest. 'Every work group member, no matter who they are, is vetted for a conflict of interest,' he said, and that vetting process has only become more stringent over time as society has become more attuned to the problem. 'I have to turn down opportunities because they would interfere with my being on a work group, and that's something I do, or did,' he said. ACIP's charter spells out that some 30 specific groups should hold non-voting seats on the committee. It also allows the HHS secretary to appoint other liaison members as necessary to carry out the functions of the committee. On Friday, eight organizations that are liaisons to the committee said in a joint statement that they were 'deeply disappointed' and 'alarmed' to be barred from reviewing scientific data and informing the development of vaccine recommendations. 'To remove our deep medical expertise from this vital and once transparent process is irresponsible, dangerous to our nation's health, and will further undermine public and clinician trust in vaccines,' said the statement, which was sent by the American Medical Association. New outside experts may be invited to participate in the workgroups as needed based on their expertise, according to an HHS official who spoke on the condition that they not be named because they had not been authorized to share the information, but such inclusion will no longer be based on organizational affiliation. 'Many of these groups don't like us,' the official said. 'They've publicly attacked us.'

HHS further constrains certain vaccine advisers to the CDC, limiting their input in evidence reviews
HHS further constrains certain vaccine advisers to the CDC, limiting their input in evidence reviews

CNN

time2 hours ago

  • CNN

HHS further constrains certain vaccine advisers to the CDC, limiting their input in evidence reviews

In a further jolt to the process of reviewing and recommending vaccines at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, another group of outside advisers to the agency was abruptly sidelined this week. In an email sent late Thursday evening, which was obtained by CNN, members of roughly 30 medical and public health organizations who serve as liaison members of the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, were told they could no longer participate in the committee's crucial workgroups. Liaison members don't vote at ACIP's public meetings on vaccine recommendations, but they can participate by asking questions and commenting on presentations. Behind the scenes, they have also historically done important work undertaking detailed evidence reviews of the safety and effectiveness of vaccines that helps to inform the group's votes. Those reviews happen in subcommittees called workgroups. As of late last year, ACIP had 11 active workgroups. In addition to studying scientific research, workgroups consider issues of public health importance like what age groups might get the most benefit from a vaccine, what an immunization costs and whether it will be accessible to people who should get it. Workgroups also help craft the language of the recommendations that are voted on by the full committee. Votes are typically held during ACIP's three public meetings each year. If ACIP approves a recommendation, it's forwarded to the CDC director for consideration. The director isn't bound by the committee's recommendation but usually follows it. Liaisons include groups like the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Pharmacists Association. Members also represent nurses and public health officials, typically groups that play a significant role in delivering vaccinations. The latest move comes more than a month after US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. removed all 17 voting members of ACIP, replacing them days later with eight of his own picks, many of whom have cast doubt on the safety of vaccines and public policy around vaccination. One member later dropped out during the required financial review. The email sent Thursday called the liaison members 'special interest groups' that are 'expected to have a 'bias' based on their constituency and/or population they represent.' 'It is important that the ACIP workgroup activities remain free of any influence from any special interest groups so ACIP workgroups will no longer include Liaison organizations,' the email said. Andrew Nixon, director of communications for HHS, said in a statement Friday that 'Under the old ACIP, outside pressure to align with vaccine orthodoxy limited asking the hard questions. The old ACIP members were plagued by conflicts of interest, influence and bias. We are fulfilling our promise to the American people to never again allow those conflicts to taint vaccine recommendations.' Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University who has been participating in ACIP for 40 years as both a voting member and a liaison member, said the move to exclude professional organizations from the process of making vaccine recommendations was shortsighted. 'The organizations have a certain ownership in the recommendations because they participate,' Schaffner said. That participation increases buy-in from different stakeholder groups, which helps ACIP recommendations become the accepted standards of medical practice. Without that participation, Schaffner said, there's a risk that groups will make their own vaccine recommendations, which could lead to conflicting and confusing advice. In fact, some outside organizations, including the Vaccine Integrity Project, have already started the process of making independent vaccination recommendations. Shaffner said he also takes issue with the idea that liaison representatives are biased, which he says implies a conflict of interest. 'Every work group member, no matter who they are, is vetted for a conflict of interest,' he said, and that vetting process has only become more stringent over time as society has become more attuned to the problem. 'I have to turn down opportunities because they would interfere with my being on a work group, and that's something I do, or did,' he said. ACIP's charter spells out that some 30 specific groups should hold non-voting seats on the committee. It also allows the HHS secretary to appoint other liaison members as necessary to carry out the functions of the committee. On Friday, eight organizations that are liaisons to the committee said in a joint statement that they were 'deeply disappointed' and 'alarmed' to be barred from reviewing scientific data and informing the development of vaccine recommendations. 'To remove our deep medical expertise from this vital and once transparent process is irresponsible, dangerous to our nation's health, and will further undermine public and clinician trust in vaccines,' said the statement, which was sent by the American Medical Association. New outside experts may be invited to participate in the workgroups as needed based on their expertise, according to an HHS official who spoke on the condition that they not be named because they had not been authorized to share the information, but such inclusion will no longer be based on organizational affiliation. 'Many of these groups don't like us,' the official said. 'They've publicly attacked us.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store