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Why is Michigan loosening its rules for parents wanting to exempt kids from vaccines?

During a measles outbreak this spring in Washtenaw County, Michigan, local health officials worked to contain cases by ramping up contact tracing and testing efforts. People could take a measles test outside the Washtenaw County Health Department offices in Ypsilanti.
Kate Wells
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KFF Health News
During a measles outbreak this spring in Washtenaw County, Michigan, local health officials worked to contain cases by ramping up contact tracing and testing efforts. People could take a measles test outside the Washtenaw County Health Department offices in Ypsilanti.

State health officials are urged parents in several counties to vaccinate babies against measles ahead of schedule this spring as cases multiplied in Michigan. The outbreaks of the highly contagious virus — which can lead to brain swelling, deafness, and death — came as parents are opting school-age kids out of vaccinations at a record-high rate.

It's a situation state officials have spent more than a decade trying to avoid. For years, they've been trying to make it harder for parents to send their kids to school unvaccinated.

State health officials are urged parents in several counties to vaccinate babies against measles ahead of schedule this spring as cases multiplied in Michigan. The outbreaks of the highly contagious virus — which can lead to brain swelling, deafness, and death — came as parents are opting school-age kids out of vaccinations at a record-high rate.

It's a situation state officials have spent more than a decade trying to avoid. For years, they've been trying to make it harder for parents to send their kids to school unvaccinated.

But those efforts have backfired in places like St. Clair County, in Michigan's conservative Thumb region. Dr. Remington Nevin, the county's medical director, has proudly declared "a new era of vaccine choice." Local parents there can now bypass the usual protocols and get school vaccine waivers via email, days after they fill out a brief digital form.

State health officials aren't fighting it.

In fact, Michigan's health agency has been helping more than 30 counties move away from a state policy once credited with sharply reducing the number of parents who opted their kids out of shots.

Remington Nevin is the medical director for the St. Clair County Health Department in Michigan. The county was the first in the state to make vaccine waivers available to parents through an online process. Parents who "felt pressured" into getting vaccines "are going to experience a new era of vaccine choice in St. Clair County," Nevin said in January at a January board meeting.
Kate Wells / KFF Health News
/
KFF Health News
Remington Nevin is the medical director for the St. Clair County Health Department in Michigan. The county was the first in the state to make vaccine waivers available to parents through an online process. Parents who "felt pressured" into getting vaccines "are going to experience a new era of vaccine choice in St. Clair County," Nevin said in January at a January board meeting.

In 2015, the state started requiring parents seeking waivers to first attend a vaccine education session, in person, at their local health department.

But in the post-COVID era, the sessions became hostile, ineffective, and sometimes even unsafe for staff, local health officials say.

One high school called police last fall over an escalating dispute with parents who refused to obtain a state-recognized waiver for their children, and a sheriff's deputy warned the parents that they could face criminal charges.

In response, the state has helped create a hybrid waiver process for dozens of counties, allowing parents to take a brief vaccine education course online — while still requiring they get their waivers signed in person.

It's part of a broader shift in strategy in a state that had some of the most polarizing and politically divisive COVID restrictions.

At Michigan schools where only 30% to 40% of students are now vaccinated, it is "simply not possible to keep diseases like measles at bay," said Natasha Bagdasarian, the state's chief medical officer.

"And when one of these measles cases ends up in a low-immunization community, that's when the ember really has a chance to expand and become a wildfire."

A short-lived success story

In 2014, Michigan had the fourth-highest vaccine waiver rate in the country.

Health officials suspected some parents were just signing waivers during the stress of school registration, not because of a deeply held conviction.

"'Oops, I forgot to do this. I'm just going to sign a waiver and be done with it,'" said Norm Hess, executive director of the Michigan Association for Local Public Health. "That's not really the way we want parents to make decisions on this issue."

Around that time, national headlines were focused on a Disneyland-linked measles outbreak in which 131 people were infected. California cracked down, becoming the first state in decades to end nonmedical vaccine waivers.

With Republicans then in control of the Michigan Legislature and governor's office, health officials found a side door. They created an administrative rule saying nonmedical waivers required certification by the local health department "that the individual received education on the risks of not receiving the vaccines being waived and the benefits of vaccination to the individual and the community."

"We were not aware of the rule until the day it happened," Suzanne Waltman, president of Michigan for Vaccine Choice, later told PBS News. "We thought it was a stealth move."

At first, it seemed to work. Kindergarten waiver rates dropped by 32% in 2015. "Kids were protected more from these vaccine-preventable diseases," Hess said.

But after that year, waiver rates started rebounding. When the pandemic hit five years later, immunization rates plunged.

Vaccine sessions for parents became 'unsafe setting' 

Dr. Juan Marquez is the medical director of a county where a measles outbreak sickened several people this spring, but even he wouldn't want to do those in-person sessions again.

"It was really creating an unsafe setting, actually, for our nurses," said Marquez, the medical director for two counties, Livingston and Washtenaw, just west of Detroit.

"Our nurses are just trying to do their job," Marquez said. "And you can imagine, to have somebody yell at you or just say not nice things to your face and sit through that for hours is demoralizing."

Juan Marquez is the medical director for Washtenaw and Livingston counties in Michigan. He says that during the pandemic, the in-person education sessions required for parents seeking vaccine waivers for their children became ineffective — and unsafe for staff.
Kate Wells / KFF Health News
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KFF Health News
Juan Marquez is the medical director for Washtenaw and Livingston counties in Michigan. He says that during the pandemic, the in-person education sessions required for parents seeking vaccine waivers for their children became ineffective — and unsafe for staff.

Washtenaw has had seven measles cases since March and is believed to be the source of an eighth case in a neighboring county. As of May 28, the state had a total of 14 cases this year.

Since the start of the pandemic, waiver requests in Michigan have been increasing.

Tensions over public health became especially high during the state's COVID lockdowns, which critics lambasted as too long and too strict. Republicans made it a campaign issue, and Donald Trump flipped the state in the 2024 presidential contest.

Some parents felt it was demeaning to have to go in for counseling sessions they perceived as judgmental.

Republican state Rep. Jennifer Wortz, recalled her session, speaking at a vaccine choice rally in Lansing last year.

"I had a very negative experience there, simply because we made decisions as parents and did the research and made the choices that we felt were best for each one of our children," Wortz said.

That resentment has also made it harder to do basic public health work, like contact tracing for measles cases, Marquez said.

The two counties Marquez oversees have given out 10,000 vaccine waivers in the past 10 years, but he believes the education sessions changed the minds of maybe one or two people.

"If we're not changing folks' minds, can we do this in a safe way?" Marquez said. "So that was really the idea behind the hybrid model."

Michigan rolls out a new workaround

At first, state immunizations director Ryan Malosh thought dropping the in-person requirement was a bad idea.

He was skeptical when Livingston County health officials said they wanted to replace in-person sessions with a 20-minute online course about the benefits of vaccines and the risks of vaccine-preventable diseases.

State health department staffers were worried that if the waiver process became more convenient, more people would get exemptions, which could lead to more outbreaks.

And because parents could get a waiver from any local health department, people from across the state might start flooding Livingston County with requests.

"We were worried that this could be sort of a sinkhole," Malosh said.

It wasn't. Parents took the online course, then made an appointment at their local health department to get their nonmedical waivers signed. Waiver rates increased in Livingston County, but at the same rate they were rising in the rest of the state.

So state officials asked the University of Michigan to create a standardized, online course that any county could use. Parents would go through a 20- to 30-minute course, answering questions about the content, and then go in person to get their waivers signed and turned in at their local health department office.

Will hybrid waiver system be enough?

About a third of the state's 83 counties have adopted this hybrid approach, but the waiver system is still creating confusion and conflict.

Last fall, a dispute over the waiver process involving a St. Clair County family blew up into a local controversy, and school officials asked local law enforcement to get involved.

Although the family lived in St. Clair, the children attended high school in neighboring Macomb County. Macomb had already switched to the hybrid model, but the parents didn't want to file any documents at all, because they didn't want their children's vaccination status to be known by local health officials.

The father, Andrew Eberly, said in November at a St. Clair County public health meeting that getting a certified waiver "forces parents like me to register personal health decisions" with the state, which he doesn't trust.

(Eberly did not respond to multiple attempts to contact him via email, via phone, and at his home.)

For years, Michigan has required parents seeking vaccine waivers for their children to attend an in-person course on the benefits of the shots. State health officials are now supporting a "hybrid" model: Parents take a brief online course but still have to get their waivers signed at the local health department. But St. Clair County is allowing parents to do the whole process online — and state officials aren't challenging the move.
Kate Wells / KFF Health News
/
KFF Health News
For years, Michigan has required parents seeking vaccine waivers for their children to attend an in-person course on the benefits of the shots. State health officials are now supporting a "hybrid" model: Parents take a brief online course but still have to get their waivers signed at the local health department. But St. Clair County is allowing parents to do the whole process online — and state officials aren't challenging the move.

At one point during the ongoing conflict, school officials asked the sheriff's department to intervene. A deputy's conversation with Eberly on Nov. 5 was captured in body-camera footage obtained by KFF Health News through a public records request.

The deputy described the counseling requirement as a set of "stupid hoops."

"I know it's super inconvenient to go into the health department, go through their stupid 10-minute class for them to tell you something you already know, to sign the waiver," the deputy said.

But the deputy went on to warn Eberley that if they continued bringing their kids to school, despite being repeatedly informed they couldn't be enrolled without a state-recognized waiver, then they could be charged with contributing to the truancy of minors.

The clash became a local cause célèbre. At a public health board meeting in January, St. Clair's medical director, Dr. Remington Nevin, seized on it — and the state's falling immunization rates — as proof that people who mistrust the state's public health establishment "have sound reasons for doing so."

So far, state health officials have declined to engage in verbal or legal conflict with Nevin, who has drawn both cheers and jeers at public meetings over his vaccine stance. He has also been the subject of internal workforce complaints at the county health department.

Instead, state officials are stressing the importance of parents understanding the risks that vaccine-preventable diseases, like measles, pose for their kids.

"Local health departments get to decide for themselves in a lot of ways what's best for their residents," Malosh said. "And I think that what's best is to be as upfront as possible, to be as truthful as possible, and to try to give the best information that we have available to us to parents so that they can actually make an informed decision."

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.

Copyright 2026 KFF Health News

Kate Wells