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This statistical report, co-authored with the UK Health Security Agency (UKSHA), reports childhood vaccination coverage statistics for England in 2023-24. Data relates to the routine vaccinations offered to all children up to the age of 5 years, derived from the Cover of Vaccination Evaluated Rapidly (COVER). Additional information on children aged 2 and 3 vaccinated against seasonal flu are collected from GPs through UKHSA's ImmForm system.
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TwitterThis dataset contains immunization status of kindergarten students in California in schools. Explanation of the different immunizations is in the attached data dictionary. The California Health and Safety Code Section 120325-75 requires students to provide proof of immunization for school and child care entry. Additionally, California Health and Safety Code Section 120375 and California Code of Regulation Section 6075 require all schools and child care facilities to assess and report annually the immunization status of their enrollees.
The annual kindergarten assessment is conducted each fall to monitor compliance with the California School Immunization law. Results from this assessment are used to measure immunization coverage among students entering kindergarten. Not all schools reported. This data set presents results from the kindergarten assessment and immunization coverage in kindergarten schools by county. To review individual school coverage and exemption rates in a separate lookup format, go to the School Lookup page at the Immunization Branch's Shots for School website: http://www.shotsforschool.org/lookup/
To see the PDF reports by year go to:https://www.shotsforschool.org/k-12/reporting-data/
See the attached file 'Notes on Methods' for data suppression in the '2016-17 ' data and after.
For earlier years of data: https://www.shotsforschool.org/k-12/reporting-data/
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TwitterPercentages of children and pregnant women who have received recommended vaccines, by target population and vaccine/antigen covering results from the 2011, 2013, 2015, 2017, 2019, and 2021 cycles of the Childhood National Immunization Coverage Survey.
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TwitterIn 2019, roughly 93 percent of German children starting school were vaccinated against tetanus in 2018. Other vaccinations for this group were against measles, mumps, and chicken pox.
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TwitterThe annual pre-kindergarten (pre-K) through 12th grade school immunization survey collects school-level, grade-specific data on vaccine coverage and exemptions. The survey collects vaccination and exemption status data on children who entered the school system on or before a specified date during the fall semester. Individual vaccine information on each student is not collected. This table shows the percentage of kindergarten students vaccinated for each school-entry mandated vaccine series and the percentage with vaccination exemptions (medical or religious) reported by school. Percentage of students vaccinated is the number of students with the required number of doses of a given vaccine divided by the total number of students. Data includes all schools who reported students in kindergarten. School-mandated vaccine series for students enrolled in kindergarten are inactivated polio, DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus, and acellular pertussis), MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella), hepatitis B, varicella, and hepatitis A. Each child has 1 of 4 possible vaccination statuses: Vaccinated, Exempt (Religious), Exempt (Medical) or Not Complete. The criteria shown below are used to assess whether a child is considered vaccinated. • Polio = at least 3 doses of inactivated polio vaccine, with the last dose on or after their 4th birthday. This is a school entry requirement starting in kindergarten. • DTaP = at least 4 doses of DTaP vaccine, with the last dose on or after their 4th birthday. This is a school entry requirement starting in kindergarten. • MMR = at least 2 doses of MMR vaccine separated by at least 28 days, with the 1st dose on or after their 1st birthday. This is a school entry requirement starting in kindergarten. • HepB = at least 3 doses of hepatitis B vaccine, with the last dose on or after 24 weeks of age. This is a school entry requirement starting in kindergarten. • Varicella = at least 2 doses of varicella vaccine separated by at least 28 days, with the 1st dose on or after their 1st birthday, or a reliable history of chickenpox disease. This is a school entry requirement starting in kindergarten. • HepA = at least 2 doses of hepatitis A vaccine, given a minimum of six calendar months apart, with the 1st dose on or after their 1st birthday. This is a school entry requirement starting in kindergarten. • All = Percentage of students with all above vaccine series required for that grade level. Children without a record of vaccination, but with serologic proof of immunity to certain diseases (measles, mumps, rubella, hepatitis B, hepatitis A, and varicella), meet school entry requirements and may be counted as vaccinated. The values for schools with fewer than 30 enrolled kindergarteners are suppressed, and those fields are left blank. Data Limitations and Considerations: • The school level data shown here are as tabulated and reported by schools and discrepancies may exist. • The Immunization Program identifies outliers and internally inconsistent data points and works with schools to resolve any data quality issues, when possible. • CT DPH cannot verify the accuracy of vaccine data for individual children or whether the documentation necessary to claim an exemption has been submitted. • Data are collected at the beginning of the school year, by which time vaccines are due. As the year progresses, immunization rates may increase as additional children receive required immunizations. Additionally, the student body is dynamic and as students arrive and leave school, the immunization rates are impacted. • Vaccine status is assessed on the level of the child and not on each vaccine. Once a child is listed as exempt, vaccination data is no longer collected in the survey for that child. Therefore, children with exemptions are not counted as vaccinated in the vaccine level assessments although they may have received some vaccines.
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TwitterData available at England, regional and Local Authority level. Some figures for the UK and individual UK countries.
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Childhood Vaccination Coverage Statistics- England 2017-18 [NS] The information in this bulletin about immunisation statistics in England comes from Public Health England (PHE). Information on childhood vaccination coverage at ages 1, 2 and 5 years is collected through the Cover of Vaccination Evaluated Rapidly (COVER) data collection for Upper Tier Local Authorities (LAs). Information on children aged 2 and 3 vaccinated against seasonal flu are collected from GPs through PHE's ImmForm system.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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The information in this bulletin about immunisation statistics in England comes from Public Health England (PHE). Information on childhood immunisation coverage at ages 1, 2 and 5 years is collected through the Cover of Vaccination Evaluated Rapidly (COVER) data collection for Upper Tier Local Authorities (LAs). Information on children aged 2, 3 and 4 immunised against seasonal flu are collected from GPs through PHE's ImmForm system.
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TwitterAs of 2019, ** percent of children in Liberia had received the second dose of measles-containing vaccine. The vaccination rates in Liberia were generally under ** percent for most of the different types of vaccines taken into consideration.
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TwitterThe Cover of Vaccination Evaluated Rapidly (COVER) programme evaluates childhood immunisation in England, collating data for children aged 1, 2 and 5. Data is collected by financial year.
Vaccination coverage statistics quarterly data tables are provisional and give an indication of current coverage.
Vaccination coverage by GP data tables are experimental and should be viewed with caution.
For quarterly reports covering financial year 2023 to 2024 (published by UKHSA), see Cover of vaccination evaluated rapidly (COVER) programme 2023 to 2024: quarterly data.
For quarterly reports covering financial year 2021 to 2022 (published by UKHSA), see Cover of vaccination evaluated rapidly (COVER) programme 2021 to 2022: quarterly data.
For earlier quarterly reports, published by Public Health England (including Q1 of 2021 to 2022), see https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20211123180403/https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/cover-of-vaccination-evaluated-rapidly-cover-programme-2021-to-2022-quarterly-data">Cover of vaccination evaluated rapidly (COVER) programme 2021 to 2022: quarterly data (Government Web Archive)
https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20140713020827/http://www.hpa.org.uk/webw/HPAweb&HPAwebStandard/HPAweb_C/1211441442288">Quarterly reports published prior to 2012 (pre-PHE).
Annual data for England, by financial year, is collected by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) under the COVER programme with further checks and final publication by NHS Digital as national statistics. Annual data is more complete and should be used to look at longer term trends.
Vaccination coverage data for Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales:
For any enquiries or feedback, contact cover@ukhsa.gov.uk
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TwitterIn 2022, ** percent of children in Ghana had received the first dose of measles-containing vaccine. In the examined year, the vaccination rates in Ghana were above ** percent for most of the different types of vaccines taken into consideration.
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This statistical report, co-authored with Public Health England (PHE), reports childhood vaccination coverage statistics for England in 2018-19. Data relates to the routine vaccinations offered to all children up to the age of five years, derived from the Cover of Vaccination Evaluated Rapidly (COVER). Additional information on children aged 2 and 3 vaccinated against seasonal flu are collected from GPs through PHE's ImmForm system.
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TwitterVaccination Coverage among Young Children (0-35 Months) • National, regional, state, and selected local area vaccination coverage estimates for 2-year-old children by birth year and birth year cohorts from the National Immunization Survey-Child. • Additional information available at https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/imz-managers/coverage/childvaxview/index.html
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TwitterVaccination rates among one-year-olds have risen drastically in the past four decades, with global coverage for some of the most important vaccines increasing from below twenty percent in 1980 to above eighty percent in 2021. Several vaccines introduced on a larger scale in the 1990s, such as the Hepatitis B vaccine, have increased from just one percent coverage to well over two thirds coverage today. As many infants receive multiple vaccines at one time, or as barriers to healthcare access are lifted, this has meant that global coverage trends have been fairly similar for the most common vaccines, and that coverage for newly developed vaccines has grown relatively quickly (such as the Hepatitis B and Inactivated Polio vaccines). Recent backsliding The COVID-19 pandemic marked the first time in recent history where coverage among one year olds dropped for multiple vaccines. In some cases, global coverage fell by as much as five or six percent for vaccines including diptheria/pertussus/tetanus, hepatitus B, measles, and polio. This backslide has been attributed to a variety of factors, such as weakened healthcare systems in less developed regions, the spread of misinformation surrounding vaccines, disruptions due to containment measures, supply chain issues, and the diversion of medical resources. It had been hoped that 2020 would be an anomaly, and that figures would return to their previous trajectory in 2021, but rising malnutrition and and weaker food supply to the poorest regions has exacerbated this further.
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TwitterAs of 2017, around 91.5 percent of children in the U.S. aged 19 to 35 months had been vaccinated against measles, mumps and rubella (MMR). The MMR vaccine is widely used around the world and is recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for adults who don’t have immunity and all children.
Measles
The number of cases of measles in the United States has dropped significantly since the introduction of the MMR vaccination. However, there has been a recent increase in measles cases, due to the growth of the vaccine hesitancy movement. Despite claims from this movement, the MMR vaccine is safe and effective. One dose of the MMR vaccine is around 93 percent effective against measles, while two doses is 97 percent effective.
Mumps
The MMR vaccine has resulted in a similar decrease in the rate of mumps cases in the U.S. One dose of the MMR vaccine is 78 percent effective against mumps, while two doses is 88 percent effective. Although the MMR vaccine is safe and effective, like any medicine it can have side effects. Common side effects include fever, a mild rash and temporary joint pain and stiffness.
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TwitterAs of April 2025, around ** percent of the surveyed adults in the United States expressed at least a fair amount of trust and confidence in the government when it came to setting childhood vaccination policies. Meanwhile, ** percent of the respondents stated having no trust and confidence in the government regarding childhood vaccination policies at all.
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TwitterThis statistic displays the share of children who received a first dose and a second dose of Measles, Mumps and Rubella (MMR) immunization in England, from 2003/04 to 2023/24. In the year 2023/24, 83.9 percent of children had received their MMR immunization by their fifth birthday.
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License information was derived automatically
Forecast: Measles Vaccination Rates Among Children in Japan 2022 - 2026 Discover more data with ReportLinker!
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TwitterData available at England, regional and Local Authority level. Some figures for the UK and individual UK countries.
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TwitterThe share of two year old children in Sweden who were covered by MMR vaccine (measles, mumps, and rubella) was relatively stable during the period from 2014 to 2021, at around ** percent. In 2021, the share two year old children vaccinated against MMR was **** percent.
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Twitterhttps://digital.nhs.uk/about-nhs-digital/terms-and-conditionshttps://digital.nhs.uk/about-nhs-digital/terms-and-conditions
This statistical report, co-authored with the UK Health Security Agency (UKSHA), reports childhood vaccination coverage statistics for England in 2023-24. Data relates to the routine vaccinations offered to all children up to the age of 5 years, derived from the Cover of Vaccination Evaluated Rapidly (COVER). Additional information on children aged 2 and 3 vaccinated against seasonal flu are collected from GPs through UKHSA's ImmForm system.