| Is there any way to easily see vaccination rates or requirements for specific colleges? |
probably easier to see the political affiliation of students and base it on that. |
+1 |
|
Requirements are a quick google away.
Rates may not be available. |
| Just have your kid get all their vaccinations. |
They may require them but also grant waivers. As vaccination rates slide so will the vaccination rates. It would be useful information to know. |
| I have two college students. No one has every checked vaccine records. They attend college in PA. Why would it matter? Have you checked your child's high school rates? |
They really should. Meningitis used to kill a lot of college students—it’s so great that there is a vaccine for it now. Even with measles — if you have congregate living with hundreds of kids in dorms, even if they are all vaccinated a couple might get sick. If you have a bunch unvaccinated, it will spread like wildfire. They should at least mandate it for people living in dorms. |
do you really need to ask why it would matter? jeesh! |
+1 it’s private medical information. |
Why? Care about your own grown adult child. Get vaccinated and keep your nose out of other peoples business. |
| You just have to look up the requirements by school. My kids have all gone to different schools with different requirements. Usually 2 doses of MMR as a minimum but some have required more. |
Again, requirements do not indicate the number of waivers which would give a better picture. If vaccination rates are too low because of waivers, chances of a breakthrough are higher. Considering how concerned people are with physical safety on a campus, it’s surprising this isn’t a bigger concern. This is particularly concerning as CDC has removed the meningitis vaccine recommendation for teens. |
That is scary. I went to college pre-vaccine, and a classmate died of meningitis senior year. |
| Also consider the state the college is in. In states with strong vaccination requirements, colleges are more likely to enforce and have a student body more likely to adhere. It will get much worse in the years to come unfortunately. |