Vaccine-exempt students behind N.C. chickenpox outbreak

Vaccine-exempt students behind N.C. chickenpox outbreak

(HealthDay)—North Carolina's largest chickenpox outbreak in decades is centered in a primary school with a large number of vaccine-exempt students, according to health officials.

Thirty-six students at Asheville Waldorf School were diagnosed with the disease last Friday, according to the Asheville Citizen-Times newspaper, BBC News reported. The school has one of the state's highest rates of religious-based vaccine exemptions for students.

Of the school's 152 students, 110 have not received the vaccine against the virus that causes chickenpox, the Citizen-Times reported, according to BBC News. In 2017-18, nearly 68 percent of the school's kindergarten students had religious immunization exemptions on file.

"This is the biggest chickenpox outbreak state are aware of since the vaccine became available," a state health department spokesman told BBC News in an emailed statement. The school is cooperating with local health officials and is compliant with all state laws, a spokesperson said.

More information: BBC News Article

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Citation: Vaccine-exempt students behind N.C. chickenpox outbreak (2018, November 21) retrieved 30 June 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2018-11-vaccine-exempt-students-nc-chickenpox-outbreak.html
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