Schools

Back-To-School: What FL Requires For COVID-19, Other Diseases

Kids in Florida aren't required to get COVID-19 vaccines to attend school. Here are the immunizations that are required.

FLORIDA — Public school systems in Florida didn’t require students to get vaccinated against COVID-19 as they returned to school last week. A 2021 law bans student COVID-19 vaccine mandates in Florida

Last year, as the omicron variant surged following holiday travel and gatherings, mandatory vaccinations were floated in several states and school districts to control the spread of the virus that, nationwide, has killed 1.03 million people since the pandemic began in 2020, including 78,559 in Florida.

The only place in the country where students will be required to get vaccinated against the coronavirus as a condition of enrollment this fall is the District of Columbia. The requirement applies to “all students who are of an age for which there is a COVID-19 vaccination fully approved by the FDA.”

Find out what's happening in Across Floridafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

California considered similar requirements, but backed away from a COVID-19 vaccine mandate last spring.

Legislatures in 20 states ban local school districts from requiring students to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

Find out what's happening in Across Floridafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

They are: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Mississippi, Montana, New Hampshire, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah and West Virginia.

On May 3, 2021, Gov. Ron DeSantis signed SB 2006, which codified the prohibition of COVID-19 vaccine passports in Florida that the governor previously put in place via an executive order on April 2. The law prohibits educational institutions from requiring students or residents to provide documentation certifying vaccination against or recovery from COVID-19.

DeSantis signed HB 1B on Nov. 19, 2021, which prohibits an educational institution or local officials from imposing a COVID-19 vaccination requirement for any student.

Only about 30 percent of U.S. children ages 5-11 are fully vaccinated, according to the latest Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data. About 60 percent of 12- to 17-year-olds are fully vaccinated.

Overall, about 223 million people — or about 67 percent of the eligible U.S. population — have been fully vaccinated nationwide, including 107.5 million people who have gotten their booster shots, according to the CDC. In Florida, 68 percent of residents are fully vaccinated, and 42.3 percent have received one booster shot.

Related: CDC Eases COVID Restrictions: Florida Impact

Will Students Mask?

The CDC relaxed its mask guidance in February, telling K-12 schools they could tie their local policies to the community rates of COVID-19 illnesses and hospital capacity, rather than the total number of COVID-19 cases.

Accordingly, schools are easing protocols to slow COVID-19 transmission, even as the BA.5 variant — the most contagious to date — quickly spreads across the country.

For example, only seven of the nation’s largest 500 school districts planned to require students and staff wear masks, according to the tracking company Burbio. That compares with 369 large school districts requiring masks in October 2021.

Gov. Ron DeSantis banned mask mandates for Florida public schools through an executive order.

As punishment for defying the order during a COVID surge in the spring, 12 school districts that required masks — Alachua, Brevard, Broward, Duval, Hillsborough, Indian River, Leon, Miami-Dade, Orange, Palm Beach, Sarasota and Volusia counties — stood to lose about $200 million collectively in budget cuts at the direction of the state legislature. That decision was later reversed by the state.

Pre-COVID Anti-Vax Tide

A tide of vaccine skepticism was sweeping the country before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, threatening to wipe out progress to eliminate measles, mumps and other childhood diseases decades after they were all but eradicated in the United States.

The bitterly polarizing issue pits public health officials and others in the medical profession — and a growing number of state lawmakers — against so-called “anti-vaxxers,” who often cite religious freedom, personal objections and government overreach in their decisions to delay vaccinations or not immunize their children at all.

Much of the current opposition to vaccines can be traced to a 1988 article published in the prestigious medical journal The Lancet in which former British doctor Andrew Wakefield falsely linked the MMR vaccine to autism.

His co-authors and the journal all redacted it, and Wakefield lost his medical license over his claims. Though the claim has been debunked over and over, it still pops up on social media as fact, worsening fears of vaccine safety.

Which Vaccines Are Required

All 50 states and the District of Columbia have laws on the books requiring that students be vaccinated against early childhood diseases, but most of them — 44, as of May — allow religious exemptions as well.

Additionally, 15 allow for philosophical exemptions for children whose parents object to immunizations because of personal, moral or other beliefs. Many states align their vaccine requirements with recommendations from the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices.

State laws vary greatly in what they require. All states but Alabama require students to be vaccinated against hepatitis B. About a half dozen states or locations — Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York City, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island — require students to get an annual flu shot.

In general, kindergarteners ages 4-6 must be vaccinated against chickenpox; diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTaP vaccine); measles, mumps and rubella (MMR vaccine); and polio. By middle and high school, students should be vaccinated against meningococcal disease, human papillomavirus (HPV vaccine) and Serogroup B meningococcal infection.

Florida requires the above vaccinations, along with varicella, chickenpox, and hepatitis B2, according to Britannica’s ProCon.org.

Exemptions are allowed in Florida for medical and religious reasons, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

A child whose parent or guardian who objects in writing that the administration of immunizing agents conflicts with his or her religious tenets or practices can exempt kids from vaccines, state law says.

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