Public Health Education

Vaccination Matters

When communities stop vaccinating, preventable diseases come back — and the most vulnerable pay the price. Here's the data, the science, and the real-world consequences of vaccine neglect.

5M+ Lives saved by vaccines every year (WHO)
285 Measles cases in Ohio outbreak 2022–23
95% Herd immunity threshold needed for measles
58% Vaccination rate in Ohio outbreak area — far below threshold
Why It Matters

Vaccines Don't Just Protect You — They Protect Everyone

Vaccines work on two levels: they protect the person who receives them, and they build a community shield — protecting babies, elderly people, and those who cannot be vaccinated due to medical conditions.

Protecting Babies Too Young to Vaccinate

Infants under 12 months cannot receive many vaccines yet. They rely entirely on the vaccinated community around them. When adults and older children skip vaccines, newborns become exposed to diseases they have zero defense against.

Herd Immunity Shields Communities

When enough people are vaccinated, a disease can't find enough hosts to spread — it dies out before reaching vulnerable individuals. This only works when vaccination rates stay above the required threshold. One community dropping below that threshold is enough to trigger an outbreak.

Schools Are High-Risk Transmission Hubs

Hundreds of children in close contact all day creates the perfect conditions for vaccine-preventable diseases to spread explosively. A single unvaccinated child with measles in a classroom can infect up to 90% of unprotected students in that room.

Immunocompromised Students Can't Fight Back

Children undergoing chemotherapy, organ transplant recipients, and those with immune disorders cannot be vaccinated — and cannot survive many infections. Their safety at school depends entirely on their vaccinated classmates.

Vaccine-Preventable Diseases Are NOT Gone

Measles, whooping cough, and polio still exist globally. They haven't disappeared — they've been suppressed by vaccination. When coverage drops, they return fast. The 2022–23 Ohio measles outbreak proved exactly this.

Outbreaks Are Expensive and Disruptive

A single measles outbreak can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars in contact tracing, hospital care, and school closures. Families face medical bills and missed school days — for a disease that is 100% preventable with a safe, proven vaccine.

Real-World Case Study

The Ohio Measles Outbreak (2022–2023)

One of the largest measles outbreaks in the United States in recent years began in Columbus, Ohio in late 2022 and spread rapidly through a community where vaccination rates had fallen dangerously below the 95% herd immunity threshold.

285 Confirmed Cases
36 Children Hospitalized
~74% Cases Under Age 5
58% Vaccination Rate in Affected Area

What happened? Most victims were infants and toddlers — many too young to have been vaccinated — who were exposed because the older children and adults around them were unvaccinated. The outbreak required emergency vaccination clinics and intensive public health intervention across the region.

The key lesson: Measles was declared eliminated in the U.S. in 2000 — but it never disappeared globally. When a community's vaccination rate falls below 95%, even a single international traveler can spark a large outbreak. Ohio is a direct and preventable consequence of vaccine hesitancy.

"This outbreak was predictable and preventable. A 95% vaccination rate is not optional — it is a public health necessity." — Ohio Department of Health, 2023
Herd Immunity Thresholds

How High Does Coverage Need to Be?

The more contagious a disease, the higher the vaccination rate needed to stop it. Falling below these thresholds is what causes outbreaks. Coverage in Ohio's affected community (58%) was far below the measles threshold.

Vaccination Coverage Needed for Herd Immunity

Measles (MMR)Needs 95%
95%
Pertussis / Whooping Cough (Tdap)Needs 92–94%
93%
COVID-19 (Omicron)Needs ~85%+
85%
Influenza (Seasonal Flu)Needs ~50–70%
60%

Thresholds are estimates based on each disease's R₀ (basic reproduction number). Sources: CDC, WHO.

Vaccine-Preventable Diseases

Diseases That Vaccines Can Stop

These diseases circulated freely in schools before vaccines existed — and they can return when vaccination rates fall.

Disease Vaccine Risk Without Vaccine in Schools Return Risk if Coverage Drops
Measles MMR (2 doses) One case can infect 90% of unvaccinated contacts in a classroom Very High
Pertussis (Whooping Cough) DTaP / Tdap booster Weeks of severe coughing; deadly in infants under 1 year Very High
Chickenpox (Varicella) Varicella (2 doses) Spreads rapidly in classrooms; can cause severe complications High
Influenza Annual flu vaccine Major driver of school absences; can be severe in high-risk students Medium–High
Meningococcal Disease MenACWY, MenB Rare but rapidly fatal; highest risk in teenagers in close quarters Medium
COVID-19 mRNA vaccines (updated annually) School disruption, Long COVID, serious illness in some children Medium
Polio IPV (4 doses) Can cause permanent paralysis; detected in U.S. wastewater again in 2022 Low (if maintained)
Myths vs. Facts

Common Misconceptions — Corrected

Misinformation about vaccines spreads faster than the diseases themselves. Here are the most common myths — and what the science actually says.

Myth

"Vaccines cause autism."

Fact

The 1998 study making this claim was fraudulent and fully retracted. Dozens of large studies involving millions of children have found no link between vaccines and autism. (CDC, WHO, AAP)

Myth

"Natural immunity is better than vaccine immunity."

Fact

Getting the disease means risking serious complications, hospitalization, or death. Vaccines give strong, safe immunity without the danger. Measles infection can also erase existing immunity to other diseases.

Myth

"These diseases are gone — we don't need vaccines anymore."

Fact

They are suppressed, not gone. U.S. measles cases jumped from 37 in 2004 to 1,200+ in 2019 due to declining vaccination. The 2022–23 Ohio outbreak is the latest proof.

Myth

"My child is healthy — they don't need vaccines."

Fact

Even healthy children can get seriously ill, and they can unknowingly carry diseases to classmates with cancer, immune disorders, or other conditions who cannot survive those infections.

Myth

"Too many vaccines overwhelm a child's immune system."

Fact

A child's immune system handles thousands of antigens daily. All recommended vaccines combined represent a tiny fraction of that. The schedule is carefully designed for safety and effectiveness. (AAP, 2023)

Myth

"Vaccines have dangerous ingredients."

Fact

Vaccine ingredients like trace aluminum exist in amounts far smaller than what's naturally present in food and water. Every ingredient is rigorously safety-tested by the FDA before approval.

CDC Recommended Schedule

Key Vaccines by School Age Group

The CDC and AAP recommend this schedule to maximize protection during the school years. Talk to your doctor if you're unsure about your child's vaccination status.

Age Group Key Vaccines Due / Recommended Why It Matters at School
4–6 years (before Kindergarten) DTaP booster, MMR 2nd dose, Varicella 2nd dose, IPV 4th dose, Annual Flu Required by most states before school entry. Establishes the immunity baseline for the whole class.
11–12 years (Middle School) Tdap booster, MenACWY, HPV series, Annual Flu Tdap renews whooping cough protection as childhood immunity wanes. HPV prevents cancer-causing infection later in life.
13–18 years (High School) MenACWY booster (age 16), MenB (optional), HPV completion, COVID-19 updated dose, Annual Flu Meningococcal disease hits teens in close quarters hardest. Updated COVID vaccines target current circulating variants.
All ages (annually) Influenza (flu) vaccine Reduces flu-related school absences by up to 72% and prevents ~80% of pediatric flu deaths (CDC).

Take Action — Check Your Vaccination Status

Not sure if your vaccines are up to date? Talk to your doctor or school nurse. It only takes a few minutes — and it could protect someone's life, including your own.