As Gov. Ron DeSantisâs administration moves toward making Florida the first state to eliminate school vaccine mandates, significant concern is growing among doctors, parents, and public health workers regarding the safety of children and other vulnerable individuals who might be at risk during a disease outbreak.
They worry that diseases, which have been controlled for decades through vaccination, could resurface if insufficient numbers of people in Florida are immunized. Hereâs what to consider:
DeSantis calls this âmedical freedomâ
Although states usually align with federal vaccine recommendations, state health departments set school mandates. Floridaâs Surgeon General, Dr. Joseph Ladapo, announced on Wednesday that the Health Department plans to remove these mandates, arguing that they are âimmoralâ interferences that limit parentsâ ability to make health decisions for their children.
âWeâre going to end it,â Ladapo said, without providing details or a timeline.
The Health Department did not immediately answer inquiries concerning other vaccine requirements, such as those for specific workplaces. Many of these requirements are codified in state law, requiring legislative approval. DeSantis has appointed Ladapo and his wife, Casey DeSantis, to a commission developing a broader âmedical freedomâ proposal expected in the next legislative session.
School nurses sound alarm
âIf theyâre successful, theyâre essentially opening the door to a fully preventable health crisis,â stated Lynn Nelson, president of the National Association of School Nurses.
Schools reflect broader society, and when students return home, they have the potential to carry diseases to susceptible groups like infants and the elderly, Nelson added.
Measles, mumps and pertussis â also known as whooping cough â are among the preventable diseases Nelson is most concerned about if Floridaâs plan succeeds. Measles, a highly contagious illness, can create life-threatening situations for infants and small children, she said.
âThere are outbreaks all over the country right now, and they will spread in any state or community where the vaccine rate drops,â she said.
Florida already lags nation in vaccination rates
This is the worst year for measles in the U.S. in more than three decades, with more than 1,400 cases confirmed nationwide, most of them in Texas, and three deaths. Whooping cough has killed at least two babies in Louisiana and a 5-year-old in Washington state since winter, as it too spreads rapidly. There have been more than 19,000 cases as of Aug. 23, nearly 2,000 more than this time last year, according to preliminary CDC data.
Even before Wednesdayâs announcement, Florida lagged the rest of the United States when it came to kindergarteners being immunized for diseases like measles, mumps and rubella, with 88.7% immunized in 2025, compared to more than 92% nationwide, according to state and federal health statistics.
New religious exemptions to vaccines have also increased, to 6.4% among children age 5-17 years old, and as much as 15% in some counties, as of April.
Thatâs according to the Florida Health Departmentâs monthly online âVaccine-Preventable Disease Surveillance Report,â which was last updated on May 29. At the time, it showed cases of hepatitis A, whooping cough and chickenpox were increasing.
Parents are divided
âIâm pro-vaccine 100%,â Ivette Faes said as she waited with other parents to pick up their kids outside Bayview Elementary School in Fort Lauderdale on Thursday. Dropping the vaccine requirements is not a good idea, she said, because âwe have to protect our kids to protect the other ones.â
But Ebony Walker, the mother of a first-grader at the school, said sheâs âall forâ removing the mandates. She said âit was scaryâ when her son had to get so many vaccines shortly after being born. Now sheâs got him a religious exemption from other inoculations.
âFloridaâs always setting the trend, doing different stuff ⌠and setting the bar for the other states to follow along,â Walker said.
Lidia Clark, who said her 7-year-old grandchild had never been vaccinated, said sheâs âecstaticâ that her family wonât have to keep securing exemptions. âIf you want to vaccinate your child, you can, but I donât believe that it should have ever been enforced on any of us,â she said.
Why are vaccines needed?
Since the first safe and effective polio vaccine was released for use in the U.S. in 1955, vaccines have become a cornerstone of public health, keeping schoolchildren and adults safe from infectious diseases that had afflicted populations for centuries.
Timely required vaccinations âare essential to protecting school-age children, youth, and the public from preventable, serious infectious diseases,â according to a recent position paper from the National Association of School Nurses. âVaccine exemptions should be eliminated, except when necessary for validated medical contraindications,â the group said.
Doctors have an important role in battling the misinformation spreading online, by âtrying to explain how vaccines work and how theyâre developed,â said Dr. Joshua Laban, a primary care physician in Miami.
How could this affect Floridaâs tourism industry?
Itâs unclear how a decline in vaccinations might affect Floridaâs top business â its $128 billion tourism industry. Florida is among the top U.S. destinations, with 143 million visitors last year.
Walt Disney World, Universal Orlando and other Orlando theme parks no longer require proof of COVID vaccinations for employees, due to Florida laws passed in 2021 during the height of the pandemic that limit employersâ power to require such protection. Representatives for Disney and Universal didnât respond to inquiries Thursday asking them about the potential impact of more unvaccinated children.
Florida also is home to a $24 billion cruise line industry, according the Cruise Lines International Association. Most cruise lines donât have any vaccine requirements. But the CDC has recommended that passengers be vaccinated against COVID and flu, and that they check which other vaccines may be recommended based on the countries theyâre visiting.
Tourism relies on stability, whether itâs economic, political or dealing with health conditions, and the change in vaccine mandates introduces an element of uncertainty, said Alan Fyall, an associate dean at the University of Central Floridaâs hospitality college.
âItâs like dropping a stone in a pond,â Fyall said. âYouâre not quite sure how those ripples are going to impact.â
