Health Administration and Policy Program, Department of Cultural and Social Studies, Creighton University, Omaha, NE, United States.
Vaccine. 2018 Jul 5;36(29):4298-4303. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2018.05.108. Epub 2018 Jun 2.
The growing proportion of parents filing personal belief exemptions (PBEs) from school-based vaccine requirements, and the clustering of PBEs in particular schools and communities, could weaken herd immunity and increase vaccine-preventable disease. Alignment of vaccine opposition with a particular political party or ideology could substantially increase PBEs. This study extends our understanding of the link between vaccine refusal and politics by identifying longitudinal associations between neighborhood political composition and school-level prevalence of PBEs between 2000 and 2015 in California.
California Department of Public Health data on PBEs in kindergartens were matched with political party registration and voting data from the California Statewide Database. Variables for partisan composition and for conservative political ideology, as well as school and neighborhood controls, were used to estimate both mixed-effects and fixed-effects regression models.
PBE rates increased more rapidly in schools located in highly Republican neighborhoods, and were three times higher than PBE rates in highly Democratic neighborhoods in 2013 (6.6% compared to 2.2%). Mixed-effects models predict a 2.3 percentage-point increase in PBEs between 2007 and 2013 for schools in neighborhoods one standard deviation above the mean for % Republican (59%), compared to a 0.8-point increase for schools in neighborhoods one standard deviation below the mean (24% Republican). Similar results were obtained when using a measure of neighborhood conservatism and when models were estimated using fixed effects.
Results indicate growing opposition to mandatory vaccinations in Republican/conservative neighborhoods, which could increase PBE clustering and increase the likelihood for outbreaks of disease in areas where conservative values are widely shared.
越来越多的家长以个人信仰为由申请(PBE)豁免学校的疫苗接种要求,而且 PBE 特别集中在某些学校和社区,这可能会削弱群体免疫,并增加疫苗可预防的疾病。疫苗反对与特定政党或意识形态的一致可能会大大增加 PBE。本研究通过确定 2000 年至 2015 年间加利福尼亚州社区政治构成与学校 PBE 流行率之间的纵向关联,扩展了我们对疫苗拒绝与政治之间联系的理解。
加利福尼亚州公共卫生部有关幼儿园 PBE 的数据与加利福尼亚州全州数据库中的政党登记和投票数据相匹配。使用党派构成和保守政治意识形态变量,以及学校和社区控制变量,来估计混合效应和固定效应回归模型。
位于共和党的社区的学校 PBE 率增长更快,而在 2013 年,共和党的社区比民主党的社区高 3 倍(6.6%比 2.2%)。混合效应模型预测,在 2007 年至 2013 年期间,社区共和党比例高于平均值一个标准差的学校 PBE 增加 2.3 个百分点(59%),而社区共和党比例低于平均值一个标准差的学校 PBE 增加 0.8 个百分点(24%)。当使用社区保守主义衡量标准和使用固定效应估计模型时,也得到了类似的结果。
结果表明,在共和党/保守派社区中,对强制性疫苗接种的反对越来越强烈,这可能会增加 PBE 的集中,并增加在广泛分享保守价值观的地区爆发疾病的可能性。