Record number of Oregon kindergartners exempt from school-required vaccinations

By Rebecca Hansen-White (KLCC)
May 16, 2025 4:49 p.m.
FILE- In this 2017 photo from the CDC, a health care provider placed a bandage on a child, who had just received a flu vaccine. In Oregon, the OHA reported Thursday, May 15, 2025 that nearly one in 10 Oregon kindergartners have a non-medical exemption to some or all of the vaccines that are required to attend school.

FILE- In this 2017 photo from the CDC, a health care provider placed a bandage on a child, who had just received a flu vaccine. In Oregon, the OHA reported Thursday, May 15, 2025 that nearly one in 10 Oregon kindergartners have a non-medical exemption to some or all of the vaccines that are required to attend school.

Scott Housley / CDC

Nearly 10% of Oregon kindergartners have a non-medical exemption to some or all of the vaccines that are required to attend school. That’s according to numbers released Thursday by the Oregon Health Authority.

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View a data visualization from the Oregon Immunization Project here.

The number of parents requesting non-medical exemptions to vaccines has been steadily increasing in Oregon. The OHA said those numbers, the highest exemption rate the state’s ever recorded, increase the chance for an outbreak of highly contagious, previously eradicated diseases like measles.

About 8% of Lane County kindergarteners had at least one non-medical vaccine exemption, putting the county just below the state average.

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In Benton and Lincoln Counties, 7% of kindergartners have exemptions.

Meanwhile, roughly 11% of Linn, Douglas and Deschutes kindergartners are exempt.

Statewide, the county with the lowest non-medical exemption rate for kindergartners was Jefferson, at 5.1%. Its neighbor to the east, Wheeler County, had the state’s highest vaccine exemption rate at 38.5%.

In a news release, Dr. Dean Sidelinger, health officer and state epidemiologist at Oregon Public Health, said the state is trying to educate families about the effectiveness and safety of vaccines.

“Vaccines have transformed public health by dramatically reducing the burden of infectious diseases, enabling children to grow up in safe environments,” Sidelinger said. “The growing trend of nonmedical exemptions threatens to undo decades of progress and puts us all at risk. OHA is committed to providing accessible, science-based information to empower families to choose vaccination.”

While more kindergartners entering the school system do have exemptions for one or more vaccines, overall about 90.4% of Oregon students were fully vaccinated this year.

Rebecca Hansen-White is a reporter with KLCC. This story comes to you from the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.

It is part of OPB’s broader effort to ensure that everyone in our region has access to quality journalism that informs, entertains and enriches their lives. To learn more, visit our journalism partnerships page.

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