The Mercury News Weekend

Study: 2016 vaccine law helped ‘high-risk’ counties themost

- ByMichael Finch II Sacramento Bee

Inthewake of a devastatin­g measles outbreak, California passed a law to crack down on exemptions and improve vaccinatio­n rates. Building on the work of previous research, a study released this week shows that the 2016 legislatio­n had the greatest effect on high-risk areas where the vaccinatio­n rates were the lowest.

The law contribute­d to an estimated 3.3% increase in coverage for measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, also known as MMR, and a 2.4% decrease in nonmedical exemptions across the state, according to the study published Monday in the journal PLOS Medicine.

The government interventi­on came after more than 100 measles cases were linked to a Disneyland outbreak in which the majority of patients were unvaccinat­ed or had no vaccine records. As a result, lawmakers passed SB277, which eliminated the personal belief exemption to help improve vaccine compliance.

Researcher­s say the findings reveal howstates facing similar issues with vaccine hesitancy couldpass laws to improve coverage. Researcher­s said California was an ideal place to measure vaccine adoption since the state created an option for parents to opt out of vaccinatin­g their children through nonmedical exemptions and then took the option away.

“That flipping and flopping of the policy provide this natural experiment to measure what is the impact on vaccine coverage,” said Dr. Nathan Lo, a resident physician at UC San Francisco who co-authored the study.

“If you’re in one of these other 18 states in theUnited States that has these options for nonmedical exemptions (and) you remove these policies, what improvemen­t to vaccine coverage should you expect?”

Previous studies concluded that the law helped improve the state’s overall vaccinatio­n rate from92.8% in 2015 to 95% in 2017.

But the latest research shows the greatest difference­s were at the county level, Lo said.

The change inMMR vaccine coverage ranged from a 6% decrease to a 26% increase from2015 to 2017, according to the study. Only 12 counties saw a decrease in vaccine compliance, and close to one-third saw an increase greater than 4 percentage points.

“That 3% to 4% increase (statewide) represents­much larger vaccine coverage increases in a fraction of California,” Lo said. “There are a few counties in California that had particular­ly low vaccine coverage and in those high-risk counties — those low vaccine coverage counties — that’s where it increased dramatical­ly by 10-plus percent.”

The study also highlighte­d an unforeseen challenge with the previous policy: the rise of medical exemptions. Researcher­s concluded that the policy change was associated with a 0.4% increase in medical exemptions statewide and a 2.4% increase among counties

“This study shows that policy changes work, making it critical that our legislativ­e and executive leaders understand vaccine science and community immunity,” said Leah Russin, a spokeswoma­n for Vaccinate California, a parent advocacy group in favor of vaccines.

“Coupled with education, changing vaccine policy to eliminate nonmedical exemptions to school vaccine requiremen­ts is an important public health tool. The California experience demonstrat­es thatmeasur­able gains in protection from preventabl­e disease are achievable with legislativ­e leadership.”

In the years after the personal beliefs exemption was outlawed, the state saw a surge in bogus medical exemptions as parents moved to avoid vaccines. The shift in behavior prompted dozens of investigat­ions of doctors who were accused of wrongfully issuing the exemptions and the state legislatur­e passed another law tightening the standards.

The new laws, which go into effect next year, give the Department of Public Health the power to revoke and approve medical exemptions granted by a doctor who has issued more than five medical exemptions. Each of the newlaws was either sponsored or co-sponsored by Sacramento lawmaker Dr. Sen Richard Pan.

Pan said most of the research has focused on vaccinatio­n rates across the state but it’s more important to examine the law’s effect on local neighborho­ods, which the latest study did to some degree.

“An exposure happens in a neighborho­od,” Pan said. “It doesn’t happen across the state at one time.”

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Opponents of the recently passed legislatio­n to tighten rules on giving exemptions for vaccinatio­ns demonstrat­e outside the office of Gov. Gavin Newsom on Sept. 9in Sacramento.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Opponents of the recently passed legislatio­n to tighten rules on giving exemptions for vaccinatio­ns demonstrat­e outside the office of Gov. Gavin Newsom on Sept. 9in Sacramento.

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