OASN News

  • Childhood Vaccines in Ohio

    The Ohio Chapter American Academy of Pediatrics released a statewide poll concerning support for childhood vaccines, in partnership with the Bowling Green State University Democracy and Public Policy Research Network.  You can read the news release here, and below is some news coverage of the poll results.  

    The poll reveals that the majority of Ohioans support childhood vaccines and trust vaccine guidance from their pediatrician or family doctor.

    More Ohioans want their kids vaccinated than not, poll shows

    The Columbus Dispatch

    Vast majority of Ohioans want their kids vaccinated, new data shows

    Samantha Hendrickson  Columbus Dispatch Jan. 21, 2026

    A new poll shows most Ohioans support childhood vaccines despite a rise in anti-vaccine rhetoric.

    The majority of Ohioans polled trust their pediatrician or family doctor for vaccine information.

    But confidence in the COVID-19 vaccine is significantly lower than for traditional vaccines like MMR and polio.

    Despite the rise of anti-vaccine rhetoric since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, new data shows that the vast majority of Ohioans support childhood vaccines and trust their doctors.

    The Ohio Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), in partnership with the Bowling Green State University Democracy and Public Policy Research Network, conducted a statewide poll of 800 voters between Oct. 2 and Oct. 14, 2025. The poll was conducted using 2025 vaccine guidelines, not the most recent federal changes on Jan. 6.

    Health experts in Ohio and across the country have expressed concern over mixed messages from the federal government and online misinformation dominating much of the conversation around childhood immunizations. In 2025, the U.S. had its worst measles outbreak in decades, with thousands of cases across the country and several outbreaks in Ohio.

    Roughly 85% of Ohio's kindergarteners were vaccinated in the 2024-2025 school year, according to the Ohio Department of Health. That number has continued to drop since the 2019-2020 school year's 89.9% mark. It follows a national trend of declining vaccination rates, many of them due to religious or philosophical exemptions.

    Still, the vast majority of those polled in Ohio are sticking with most medical professionals' recommendations when it comes to vaccinating their children, according to AAP's data.

    "It's important to highlight that vaccine hesitancy is not the norm," said Dr. Vivek Ashok, a pediatrician with Cincinnati Children's Hospital, at a Jan. 20 press briefing.

    87% of respondents think it is "very important" or "important" for parents to get their kids vaccinated.

    89% said they were "very confident" or "confident" that their pediatrician or family doctor provides them with the information they need to make informed decisions about vaccines.

    Dipping a little lower, 75% of respondents believe that parents should be required to have their children vaccinated against preventable diseases.

    Of that 75%, 88% said a major reason they support routine childhood vaccine requirements is because they think routine childhood vaccines are effective in protecting most children.

    Of that 75%, 82% said routine childhood vaccines have been proven safe because they are well tested.

    Of the 75%, 78% said a major reasons parents should be required to vaccinate their children is because vaccines have been proven safe because they have been around for decades.

    Of the 75%, 85% said they support childhood vaccine requirements because they think diseases like measles will come back if routine childhood vaccines are no longer required.

    However, only 43% of total respondents felt "very confident" or "confident" in the safety of the COVID-19 vaccine.

    But 83% felt "very confident" or "confident" in the MMR, or measles, mumps and rubella, vaccine, and 85% in the polio vaccine.

    88% of respondents said that health insurers, including government sponsored health insurers, should be required to pay for vaccines.

    82% of respondents have heard about the benefits of vaccines for children, while only 55% of individuals have heard about the dangers.

    83% of respondents "do not trust at all" or "only slightly trust" their social media feeds to provide reliable information about vaccines.

    When looking at political demographics, Republicans tended to trust the COVID-19, MMR and polio vaccine less than Democrats. However, regardless of political affiliation, the majority of respondents are concerned about the resurgence of vaccine preventable diseases.

    "If you look at our country 125 years ago, one in 5 children died before their fifth birthday," said Robert W. Frenck, director of the Vaccine Research Center at Cincinnati Children's Hospital. "It's almost incomprehensible in the United States to think of that... this is really due to public health, and a lot of that public health is vaccines."

    Business and consumer issues reporter Samantha Hendrickson can be reached at shendrickson@dispatch.com

     

    Ohioans support required childhood vaccinations, poll says | The Blade

     

    The Blade

    Ohioans support required childhood vaccinations, poll says

     KIMBERLY WYNN   The Blade   kwynn@theblade.com   Jan 20, 2026

    A strong majority of parents support childhood vaccinations, according to a poll conducted Oct. 2-14 by the Ohio Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

    “Most Ohioans support childhood vaccines and trust their doctors, but confusion is driven by mixed messages,” said Dr. Vivek Ashok, a Cincinnati pediatrician.

    Partnering with the Democracy & Public Policy Research Network at Bowling Green State University, the Ohio Chapter held a roundtable Tuesday to share the results of the survey of 800 state voters.

    “I believe that parents want to do the right thing,” said Dr. Robert Frenck, Jr., medical director of adolescent immunizations for Ohio AAP, noting that the roundtable is another way to provide education and connection about the benefits of vaccination.

    Ongoing public debate has left parents feeling overwhelmed, which is why the Ohio AAP conducted the poll, according to the panel of experts.

    “If you look at our country 126 years ago, 20 percent of children died before their fifth birthday,” Dr. Frenck said. “We don't want to go back there again.”

    Ohio parents seemed to agree. Eighty-seven percent said they think it is very important or important that parents get their kids vaccinated, according to the poll. Another 75 percent believe that childhood vaccinations should be required against preventable diseases.

    “Everyone is concerned about measles coming back," said Dr. Douglas Fleck, a pediatrician in Ashtabula County. He noted the poll indicated parents felt vaccines were safe because they have been around for decades and they believe the prevalence of childhood diseases will return if immunization schedules are not followed.

    In some ways, the vaccinations have become products of their own success, according to Dr. Eric Geyer, a supervising pharmacist in Cuyahoga County.

    “People don’t know what it was like previously,” he said.

    The panel of statewide experts agreed it is better to keep somebody healthy than to treat them after they are sick. They also underscored the fact that immunizations have always been a shared decision between parents and their pediatricians.

    “We always use what is evidence based and what is safe and use that in conjunction with shared decision making,” Dr. Ashok said.

    To maintain herd immunity for measles, a community needs about a 95 percent rate, according to the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The Ohio kindergarten school immunization rate for measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) was 88.3 percent for the 2024-2025 school year. The rate was 84.2 percent in Lucas County and 92.9 percent in Wood County, according to the Ohio Department of Health. 

    First Published January 20, 2026, 5:14 p.m.

  • Federal Childhood Immunization Recommendations

    Recent media coverage and public discussion about potential changes to national childhood immunization recommendations have raised questions and created uncertainty among school nurses, families, and education leaders. While OASN/NASN does not issue clinical immunization guidelines, school nurses are responsible for implementing immunization requirements in schools and supporting families when national guidance becomes unclear or contested. NASN’s recently published statement is intended to provide clarity, reinforce the importance of evidence-based decision-making, and center the real-world impact of policy uncertainty on schools, students, and health equity.

    Also of reference is NASN's Position Statement: Immunization and Vaccination Requirement

    School Nurse Talking Points

    In 2026, OASN/NASN wants to provide more advocacy support to affiliates, including issue identification, training, and messaging. More will be coming out about that in the coming months. Starting with this position statement, we plan to share optional talking points for state affiliates.

    • The National Association of School Nurses (NASN) is concerned that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is changing childhood immunization recommendations in ways that could reduce the number of vaccines recommended for U.S. children, from 17 - 11.
    • The proposed vaccine schedule is modeled after European countries (specifically Denmark), which have fundamentally different health care systems and much smaller, more centralized populations than the United States.
    • U.S. health policy cannot be effectively modeled after smaller, dissimilar nations with different public health infrastructures and delivery systems.
    • Unlike previous schedules, these new recommendations are not based on the same level of scientific evidence and consensus.
    • Limiting vaccines to “high-risk” groups may result in insurance companies refusing coverage for vaccines that parents and physicians believe are necessary for children.
    • The United States is already experiencing large measles outbreaks, demonstrating the real-world consequences of reduced vaccination coverage.
    • These changes risk increasing public distrust in science and vaccines, reinforcing the false perception that vaccines are optional rather than essential for public health.
    • Increased illness will place a greater burden on schools, including higher absenteeism due to illness, quarantine or exclusion after exposure, and outbreak management.
    • Families will be impacted as parents and caregivers are forced to miss work to care for sick children or comply with school exclusion policies.
    • Differences between federal recommendations and state or regional public health guidance may further complicate vaccine implementation and enforcement in schools.
    • School nurses are the front line of health care in schools ensuring immunization policies protect children and enable schools to function safely and effectively in the United States.
    • School nurses rely on clear, evidence-based immunization guidance to protect student health and support learning. Sudden or non-evidence-based changes create confusion for families, strain schools, and disproportionately affect under-resourced communities.
    • Stable, evidence-based immunization recommendations are essential for schools to function safely and equitably. When national guidance is disrupted, school nurses are left managing confusion and conflict that undermines trust, prevention, and student attendance.

    CDC New Recommendations

    All Children

    High-Risk Children

    Shared Clinical
    Decision-Making

    diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis, Haemophilus influenzae type b, pneumococcal disease, polio, measles, mumps, rubella, varicella and HPV (One dose of HPV vaccine will be recommended instead of two).

    RSV, hepatitis A, hepatitis B, dengue, meningococcal ACWY and meningococcal B. Risk factors include exposure, underlying conditions and risk of disease transmission. All children whose mother did not receive an RSV vaccine continue to be recommended to receive a dose of a monoclonal antibody.

    Rotavirus, COVID-19, influenza, meningococcal disease, hepatitis A and hepatitis B

    Suggested Uses for School Nurses

    • Conversations with school administrators: Use to explain why stable, evidence-based immunization guidance supports attendance, safety, and learning continuity.
    • School board or district inquiries: Reference when responding to questions about immunization requirements or potential changes in national guidance, keeping the focus on consistency and clarity rather than speculation.
    • Community engagement: Use as background framing when speaking with parent groups or community partners to emphasize prevention, equity, and the role of school nurses.
    • Media inquiries (if needed): Draw from the NASN Position Statement, the press statement and talking points above to ensure messaging remains aligned with NASN’s national position.

    What Not to Do (Important Guardrails)

    • Do not speculate about future changes to immunization schedules or timelines.
    • Do not debate clinical vaccine science or issue medical advice beyond scope.
    • Do not compare U.S. policies to other countries’ schedules beyond noting systems are not equivalent.
    • Do not attribute motives or intent to federal agencies or officials.
    • Do not contradict state or local requirements currently in effect.

    School Nurses are encouraged to defer clinical or medical questions to appropriate health care providers and to focus communications on school-based implementation, student well-being, and equity.

  • Join the Leadership Team of OASN!

    OASN is inviting members who would like the opportunity to gain or advance their leadership skills in school nursing to join the leadership team. There are opportunities available for all levels of time commitment. Please consider any opportunity where you can volunteer your time, enthusiasm, and talents. OASN will work with you and your schedule. Talents needed for the following:

    • Representative at Large - overall representative of school nursing issues in Ohio.
    • Advocacy Committee - interest in advancing the interests of school nursing and child health in Ohio. 
    • Public Relations Chair - working with leadership on social media and messaging to members and the general public.
    • Membership Chair - working with leadership on recruiting and retaining members.
    • Education and Research Endowment Advisory Committee Chair - working with leadership on oversight of endowment activities to ensure the future of  school nursing in Ohio.
    • President-Elect - elected leadership position with OASN that includes 2 years of mentorship into the role.
    • Contact Heidi Sandlin President Elect
  • Oral Health Ohio Board Reviews Fluoride Use Data

    At the May 19th Board meeting, Oral Health members reviewed Recent Fluoride Developments presented by Jennifer Meyer RN,MPH,PH.D. 

    Recent Fluoride Developments

  • Nationwide Children's Annual School Health Conference

    41st Annual School Health Conference held at Nationwide Children's  Friday 10-17-2025 from 7-4:30pm

  • School Nurses and SBHCs: Partnership for Success

    An SBHC complements and supports ─ but does not replace or duplicate ─ school nurse services. 

  • Op-Ed Cleveland Plain Dealer: Can I Tell You Something, Nurse Chris?

    House Bill 8 ignores the complexities of school-based nursing. How can you limit the caring a registered professional nurse provides to their students every day?