From Reuters:
“Swimming, s'mores and shots:
Camps harden vaccine rules in U.S. measles outbreak”
As the United States battles its
worst measles outbreak in 25 years, summer camps are tightening their policies
on vaccines, with some prepared to turn away children whose parents opted not
to vaccinate them against the disease. With
more than 10 million American children attending summer day and overnight
camps, camp owners and industry associations said they are urging parents to
follow medical experts’ advice to prevent their camps from becoming
transmission sites for the highly contagious and sometimes deadly illness. Scott Rosmarin, whose family has operated
Rosmarins Day Camp in Monroe, New York, for three generations, said he has
already sent past camp families a letter warning that he will turn away
longtime campers if their parents cite religious or philosophical objections to
the vaccine. “I used to accept kids if they
had a religious exemption, but now I’m not,” Rosmarin said in a phone interview
from his camp in the Hudson Valley, about 50 miles (80 km) north of New York
City. “If I lose a couple kids, I lose a couple kids ... You’ve got to do
what’s right.” Rosmarin has particular
reason to be concerned. New York State accounts for the majority of the almost
900 new measles cases reported in the United States this year, with outbreaks
concentrated in the Brooklyn borough of New York City and Rockland County,
north of the city. Health experts have
called the rapid spread of the disease, which hit a 25th U.S. state with a
confirmed case in Maine this week, “completely avoidable.” They attribute the ongoing outbreak to a
campaign of misinformation about the vaccine among a vocal fringe of parents
who believe it may cause autism, although medical science has debunked this
concern. The New York State Department
of Health sent out a warning about the virus last month to the approximately
2,550 licensed summer camps in the state. The letter, seen by Reuters,
emphasized that the department “strongly recommended” anyone working at or
attending summer camps get the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine, which confers immunity
to the disease. Health officials in the
six other states where the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is
monitoring active outbreaks told Reuters they have not taken similar steps.
‘BEING VERY STRICT’
But camps across the country have
sought counsel from their local health departments as they prepare to take the
necessary steps to prevent the disease from spreading, said Kelley Freridge, a
spokeswoman for the American Camp Association. “This year in particular, similar to schools
and other places, camps are being very strict about allowing children without
immunizations,” said Susie Lupert, executive director of the camp association’s
New York and New Jersey chapter. Nationally,
the group accredits some 3,100 camps that serve about 10.3 million children a year.
That represents just a fraction of the total number of camps in the United
States, which range from historic lakefront properties in New England, where
children live in cabins, to camps focused on particular sport skills, to local
day camps featuring crafts and songs. The
Association of Camp Nursing, a national professional organization for camp
nurses and other staff, posted a letter on its website this month warning that
everyone at camp should be fully immunized unless they have a medical exemption.
Summer camps are subject to a patchwork
of state regulations, many of which do not stipulate whether they can admit
children who have not received the measles vaccine for non-medical reasons. Some camps face no regulation at all. The New
York State Department of Health regulates sleepaway and day camps that offer
multiple activities, but state law exempts camps that focus on a single
activity, such as theater, music or a sport. Ben Esposito, director of Camp Alvernia in
Centerport, New York, east of New York City, said a couple of families had
already withdrawn from camp since he sent out the updated vaccine policy. He said the lost business was worth it to
protect his youngest campers who, at 3 years old, are too young to have
received the second recommended dose of the MMR vaccine and are particularly
vulnerable to contagion. “It is
something that is very easy for folks to prevent,” Esposito said. “We really
value the health and safety of the children.”
^ The time for the unvaccinated
to be around the vaccinated is over. It only makes sense to keep people who
refuse or whose parents refuse to get them vaccinated away from people who are
vaccinated. That will go a long way to keep these diseases from spreading –
especially among those who have done everything possible to stay safe (ie.
getting vaccinated.) I worked at a Summer Camp for the mentally and physically
disabled for 4 Summers and every year I had to get shots and prove I had other
ones. The campers also had to have them to attend. That was before this current
outbreak. I believe that Summer Camps and Schools (and any place where a large
group of people gather - especially for
young people) should protect themselves and those that attend and people who
decide to not get vaccinated may be allowed to get sick themselves, but they
shouldn’t be allowed to get other people sick. ^
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