Showing posts with label vaccination rates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vaccination rates. Show all posts

Sunday, February 27, 2022

NYC school mask mandate may be lifted as soon as March 7-- though vax rates remain low at many schools

NY Governor Hochul announced today that she would lift the mask mandate for schools statewide on March 4.  NYC Mayor Eric Adams said that if the Covid numbers still low, he will lift the school mask requirement  on Monday, March 7, as well as vaccination mandates for indoor dining, fitness centers and entertainment venues.

Meanwhile, the vaccination rates in many schools remain quite low, with wide disparities across the city.  On Friday, two months after the legal deadline for such reporting, the DOE finally posted vax rates citywide and by school.  You can download the spreadsheet here, or look up the name of your school here.   

Citywide, the rates of fully vaccinated children is at 52%, though at 130 schools the average is under 20%.  Aside from some vaccination clinics in Nov. and early December, there has been very little apparent attempt by DOE to encourage parents to raise these rates, for reasons that are hard to understand.  Nothing has been done since the new administration took over.

Given the low rates of vaccination in many schools, the lifting of the mask mandate at this point will likely make many parents and teachers  anxious.

And though the administration has finally complied with one part of Local Law 152, it still has not complied with these other reporting requirements, to my knowledge:

5. The number of unvaccinated students required to quarantine due to exposure in school to an
individual who tested positive for COVID-19, further disaggregated by students, teachers,
administrators, and other school staff.
d. To the extent such information is collected, the aggregated and disaggregated information
required weekly pursuant to subdivision b of this section shall also be further disaggregated by
grade level, gender, race or ethnicity, individualized education program status, English language learner status, status as a student residing in shelter and status as a student in temporary housing
that is not a shelter.
e. No later than 30 days after the effective date of this local law, and monthly thereafter, the
chancellor shall conspicuously post on the department’s website the aggregated and disaggregated
information required pursuant to subdivision c of this section, further disaggregated by grade level,
gender, race or ethnicity, individualized education program status, English language learner status,
status as a student residing in shelter and status as a student in temporary housing that is not a
shelter, to the extent such information is collected.

When will they?  It's anyone's guess.

Thursday, February 17, 2022

DOE absurdly claims that their refusal to report on vaccination rates is due to privacy concerns



UPDATE: the DOE finally released school-wide vaccination rates on Feb. 25, about two months after this data reporting was legally due.  You can download the spreadsheet here, or look up the name of your school here 

Finally, a media outlet covers the fact that NYC DOE is violating the law when it comes to their refusal to report on student vaccination rates overall and by school.  As Christina Veiga of Chalkbeat writes,

How many New York City public school students are vaccinated?

Education department officials won’t say, even though they use those statistics to determine how many students to test for COVID at each school. The city has not provided school-level vaccination rates despite a City Council law that requires the department to do so. The city also missed its Wednesday deadline in responding to Chalkbeat’s public records request for the data.

That information is particularly relevant now, as Gov. Kathy Hochul weighs whether to end school mask mandates. A decision is expected in early March, and vaccination rates are one of the factors Hochul has said she will consider.

We wrote about the fact that the DOE refuses to release this mandated data according to Local Law 152 last Sunday.

 DOE claims to Chalkbeat that the delay is due to student privacy concerns:

New York City education department officials said they are making sure to comply with any student privacy laws before releasing school-level vaccination information. “This is sensitive data and we are currently working to balance transparency with the privacy of our students prior to the release of this data,” said education department spokesperson Nathaniel Styer.

As a privacy advocate who co-founded the Parent Coalition for Student Privacy seven years ago, I can safely say that this is an absurd excuse, as vaccination rates contain NO personally identifiable student info.  It is especially absurd given how the DOE continues to violate the state student privacy law every day.

 

Sunday, February 13, 2022

Why is NYC refusing to report vax rates in schools as required by law, & doing little to increase those numbers?


UPDATE: the DOE finally released school-wide vaccination rates on Feb. 25, about two months after it was legally due.  You can download the spreadsheet here, or look up the name of your school here

Given all the debate over whether the mask mandate in schools should be lifted or remain in place, it is more important than ever that all NYC public school students age five and up who are eligible are vaccinated. 

We actually don't even know how many are: the only available data pertains to all children: those  5-11 years old are  about 33%  fully vaccinated, and those 12-17 year olds about 76%, according to state data.  The city  has similar figures: 39% for children ages 5-12 and 77% for children ages 13 to 17.  However, doesn't tell us what the vaccination rate for public school students, either citywide or for individual schools.

Yet Local Law 152 was approved by the DOE in November of 2021 and came into force in mid-January,.  The law requires DOE to report on vaccination rates, as well as  consent rates for Covid testing and much other data, both citywide and by individual school as well as disaggregated by race, ethnicity etc.   

Here is an excerpt from the law:

To the extent such information is collected, no later than 15 days after the effective date of
this local law, and every two weeks thereafter, the chancellor shall conspicuously post on the
department’s website a report that includes the following information, aggregated citywide and
disaggregated by school, for the previous two weeks:

1. The number and percentage of students partially vaccinated for COVID-19 in attendance;
2. The number and percentage of students partially and fully vaccinated for COVID-19;
3. The number of COVID-19 student testing consent forms received by the department that are
deemed valid and unexpired as of the end of the reporting period, and the total number of students
who were unvaccinated as of the end of the reporting period;
4. The number of COVID-19 student testing consent forms withdrawn; and
5. The number of unvaccinated students required to quarantine due to exposure in school to an
individual who tested positive for COVID-19, further disaggregated by students, teachers,
administrators, and other school staff.
d. To the extent such information is collected, the aggregated and disaggregated information
required weekly pursuant to subdivision b of this section shall also be further disaggregated by
grade level, gender, race or ethnicity, individualized education program status, English language learner status, status as a student residing in shelter and status as a student in temporary housing
that is not a shelter.
e. No later than 30 days after the effective date of this local law, and monthly thereafter, the
chancellor shall conspicuously post on the department’s website the aggregated and disaggregated
information required pursuant to subdivision c of this section, further disaggregated by grade level,
gender, race or ethnicity, individualized education program status, English language learner status,
status as a student residing in shelter and status as a student in temporary housing that is not a
shelter, to the extent such information is collected.

Yet the DOE has so far refused to release this data, as far as I know.  Why is this important? 

The city is spending millions of dollars on TV ads encouraging parents to have their children vaccinated.  Yesterday, I asked parents and teachers on Twitter the following question:

You can see the answers on Twitter. Most responders said their schools had done nothing to encourage parents to have their children vaccinated. One teacher said the principal had taken advantage of a vaccination clinic at a co-located school to get a booster, but hadn't informed the students or staff at their school of any such opportunities.  And one teacher actually said that DOE has discouraged them from even mentioning the vaccination issue to their students:

What a loss.  This should be the top safety priority of schools going forward over the next few weeks.  

New Orleans now requires vaccination of ALL students; DC has mandated vaccinations in its schools by March 1. 

The very least the DOE should do is provide the legally-required data for public school students, both citywide and  in individual schools, and make focused efforts in the schools where rates are low to persuade parents that vaccination is in the best interest of their children, their families, and their schools.