Orange County NC Website
tarheel <br />Vaccination exemptions increase risk of disease <br />BURHAN KADIBHAI I PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 24, 2015 <br />Vaccine - preventable diseases pose risks for possible outbreaks in schools in Orange County — and <br />the rates reflect that risk. <br />Of the children enrolled in all Chapel Hill - Carrboro City Schools, 15 have received medical <br />exemptions and 127 have received religious exemptions from school- required vaccinations in the <br />2015 -2016 school year. <br />BY THE NUMBERS <br />142 exemptions for 2015 -2016 <br />75 exemptions in 2008 -2009 <br />622 cases of pertussis in 2013 <br />478 cases for under age 20 <br />The number of religious exemptions in Chapel Hill - Carrboro <br />City Schools has increased since the 2008 -2009 school year, <br />when 75 students received exemptions. <br />Jeff Nash, spokesperson for CHCCS, said some parents do <br />not vaccinate their children due to religious reasons, which is <br />an approved exception policy, but there are only a few of <br />these exceptions. <br />"The vaccination rates are high in our schools, but there is still room for improvement," Nash said. <br />"We are continuously educating students regarding safety." <br />The Emerson Waldorf School, an independent pre -K to 12th grade school, has a student vaccination <br />rate of approximately 62 percent, which is the lowest rate throughout Orange County public and <br />private schools. <br />In 2013, 622 cases of the vaccine - preventable disease pertussis, commonly known as whooping <br />cough, were reported in North Carolina. 478 cases of the disease were people under the age of 20. <br />Judy Butler, the public health nursing supervisor for Orange County, said the issue of outbreak is not <br />restricted locally, but is nationwide. <br />"There was a measles outbreak that affected several states that resulted from someone who was <br />unvaccinated bringing measles from abroad," Butler said. <br />Butler said she thinks educating parents to look at the proven data about vaccinations is the key to <br />increasing the rate of child vaccinations. <br />"There were some studies that linked vaccinations to autism, and they have been disproved," Butler <br />said. "They have been found to be falsified, but a lot of people listen to those studies. That's a small <br />part of the population. The vast majority of people do believe in vaccinations." <br />