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UT Austin To Require Incoming Students To Have Measles Vaccination

The tower at the University of Texas Austin
Gabriel C. Pérez
/
KUT

Incoming UT Austin students will need to show proof they’ve been vaccinated against measles starting this fall, according to University Health Services.

The new requirement does not apply to students currently in classes or those enrolling this spring or summer. 

UT made the decision last fall, after seeing upticks in measles across the U.S., according to Sherry Bell, interim communications manager for UHS and UT Counseling and Mental Health Services. In 2019, the U.S. saw the greatest number of measles cases since 1992, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“The university wants to keep students healthy and in class, not missing class due to a preventable disease like measles,” Bell said. 

UT made the decision to require the vaccination before the recent measles and rubella cases that were confirmed in Travis County, Bell said. It was the first time someone had been diagnosed with either disease since 1999. 

UT already requires students 21 and younger to provide evidence they’ve had a meningococcal vaccine, as required by state law. But previously, UT required only international students to provide evidence they’d been vaccinated against measles as well. Bell said the added requirement for international students has existed for a while, since some diseases are more prevalent in other countries than they are in the U.S.

"But now we're seeing upticks here," she said.

Measles is a highly contagious viral disease. Doctors typically administer the mumps, measles and rubella vaccine when children are 12 to 15 months old, and a booster shot is then given between ages 4 and 6. 

Health officials say the vaccination rate in Austin and Travis County is relatively high, but “there are pockets of communities where vaccination opt-outs bring herd immunity to an unstable status.” 

UT students can get exemptions from vaccines for medical reasons if they provide a certificate signed by a doctor or due to reasons of conscience, like religious reasons. But health officials encourage vaccinations so people can be protected from measles and other vaccine-preventable diseases.

Got a tip? Email Marisa Charpentier at mcharpentier@kut.org. Follow her @marisacharp.

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Marisa Charpentier is KUT's assistant digital editor. Got a tip? Email her at mcharpentier@kut.org. Follow her on Twitter @marisacharp.
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