Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Multi-State Measles Outbreak Sparks Political Debate
Top Republican lawmakers on Tuesday strongly backed routine vaccination of children against deadly diseases, marking a shift in the political debate that has erupted around a multistate measles outbreak. An estimated 102 measles cases in 14 states have been tied to an outbreak that began at a Disneyland Resort in California in December. Experts say this doesn鈥檛 present a risk of measles spreading nationwide, because the vast majority of Americans are vaccinated against it. And the outbreak isn鈥檛 even the largest in the U.S. in recent years. (Hughes, Peterson and McKay, 2/3)
A slew of Republicans eyeing the White House rushed to praise the virtues of vaccination on Tuesday 鈥 distancing themselves from Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, who had appeared to question their safety as health officials across the country move to contain an outbreak of measles. It was yet another case where Paul, an ophthalmologist by training who insisted Tuesday that he鈥檇 been misunderstood, has found himself isolated on a subject within the likely GOP presidential field. But it also showed that vaccines, like a number of other scientific issues, could prove a delicate topic for Republicans who must cater to a conservative base that is suspicious of anything that smacks of a government demand. (Schreckinger, 2/3)
The latest tweet from Hillary Rodham Clinton sounded straightforward enough: 鈥淭he science is clear: The earth is round, the sky is blue, and #vaccineswork.鈥 But the issue of vaccinations has long been politically and emotionally fraught 鈥 involving not just public health but also the proper role of government, the prerogatives of parents and medical riddles that have yet to be solved. (Tumulty, 2/4)
The national conversation about vaccines and whether parents should be required to vaccinate their children has migrated from playgrounds and Facebook pages to the corridors of power. And although the science is settled, the politics are more perilous. NPR White House correspondent Tamara Keith reports. (2/3)
The question of whether parents should be forced to vaccinate their children spilled into the 2016 presidential race this week as two potential Republican contenders defended and clarified comments they made expressing support for voluntary immunizations. The fraught debate 鈥 intensified by a recent multistate outbreak of measles 鈥 seems split: between those who think mandatory vaccines are a vital tool in preventing the spread of deadly disease and vaccine skeptics who worry about vaccine risks and say the decision shouldn鈥檛 be the government鈥檚 to make. (Gershman, 2/3)
The rise of often-affluent parents who object to vaccinating their children hasn鈥檛 led to any major changes in state laws mandating immunizations. Data compiled and analyzed by the Journal of the American Medical Association and the Immunization Action Coalition show that 31 bills have been introduced since 2009 in more than a dozen states to make it easier for parents to opt out of mandatory school vaccines. None have become law despite a push by some parents who believe the immunizations could harm their children鈥檚 development. (Tau, 2/3)
The letter arrived in the midst of a growing furor about the country鈥檚 worst measles outbreak in years. Cindy Shay, a Maryland health-care lawyer, had been taking her children to Bayside Pediatrics in Annapolis for a decade when her doctor wrote last month that he was 鈥渘o longer able to continue as your child鈥檚 pediatrician.鈥 (Hendrix, 2/3)
The ongoing measles outbreak linked to Disneyland has led to some harsh comments about parents who don't vaccinate their kids. But Juniper Russo, a writer in Chattanooga, Tenn., says she understands those parents because she used to be one of them. "I know what it's like to be scared and just want to protect your children, and make the wrong decisions," Russo says. (Hamilton, 2/4)
Local health officials are criticizing the White House for including cuts to an immunization program at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in its proposed 2016 budget. In a statement, the National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO) said the Obama administration is making a mistake given the widening outbreak of measles in 14 states. (Viebeck, 2/3)
Los Angeles County officials say the spread of measles appears to be slowing, but they're concerned about low vaccination rates in some parts of the county. Interim county health officer Dr. Jeffrey Gunzenhauser said there have been 21 confirmed measles cases in Los Angeles County during the recent outbreak, of which 17 have been associated with Disneyland. Statewide, there have been 92 confirmed cases. (Sewell, 2/3)