Schools
Pleasant Hill Parents Reject Vaccines at Higher Rate than State and County Averages
See which Pleasant Hill school reported the highest percentage of unvaccinated kindergartners in 2012.

An article in Slate this week asked whetherΒ parents who decline to immunize their children should beΒ sued or charged with a crimeΒ when their decision leads to an outbreak of illness.Β
The piece pointed to a 2008 San Diego incidentΒ where an unvaccinatedΒ 7-year-old boy caught measles in Switzerland and then passed the virus on to 11 other unvaccinated kids.Β
The Slate article comes as public health departments across the country are reminding parents to bring proof of vaccinations when enrolling their children in school.Β
InΒ California, kindergartnersΒ need five DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis), four polio, three hepatitis B, two MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) and one varicella (chickenpox) shot.Β
However, California is one of 18 states whereΒ parents may stillΒ enroll students who have not been immunizedΒ if they claim an exemption due to personal beliefs.Β
Out of the 646 children who enrolled as kindergarteners in Pleasant Hill last year, 4Β percent started school without having received the battery of vaccinations required by the state because of the personal beliefs of their parents or guardians. That figure is higher than the statewide average of 2.7 percent and higher than the average for Contra Costa County of 2.1 percent.Β
Pleasant Hill Elementary School reported that 7 percent of kindergartners were not vaccinated in 2012, the highest percentage in town.Β
A study by the California Department of Public HealthΒ in 2010 found that 80 percent of parents who don't immunize their kids do so because they believe the vaccines pose a health risk.Β
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