New study shows global decline in parental trust in childhood vaccines after COVID-19, contributing to increased measles outbreaks
Bar-Ilan University research finds pandemic skepticism continues to impact immunization rates in Israel and the UK, putting herd immunity at risk
2025-10-28
(Press-News.org) October 28, 2025 — An international study led by the Azrieli Faculty of Medicine in the Galilee at Bar-Ilan University reveals that the COVID-19 pandemic has contributed to a diminishing public trust in childhood vaccines, resulting in declining vaccination rates and a resurgence of preventable, life-threatening diseases such as measles. The findings come amid one of the most severe measles outbreaks in Israel in decades, with thousands of infections and multiple child deaths reported nationwide.
Published in the peer-reviewed journal Vaccine, the study surveyed 2,047 parents with children born both before and after the pandemic in Israel and the UK and found that coverage for key childhood immunizations, including measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) and diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTP) containing vaccines, has dropped sharply since the pandemic. Among surveyed UK parents, MMR vaccination rates fell from 97.3% among children born before COVID-19 to 93.6% for those born afterward. In Israel, the rate declined from 94.3% to 91.6%. Similar decreases were observed for DTP. Alarmingly, 5% of surveyed parents in the UK and 6.6% in Israel who vaccinated an older child before the pandemic chose not to vaccinate a younger child born afterward for at least one childhood vaccine.
“The study shows that the COVID-19 pandemic has had a clear impact on parents’ attitudes and behavior toward vaccination,” said Prof. Michael Edelstein, public health expert and lead author of the study at Bar-Ilan University’s Azrieli Faculty of Medicine. “Beyond the 37% of parents who reported a decline in trust in vaccines after COVID-19, a shift of just 5% who choose not to vaccinate their younger children is enough to rapidly trigger an outbreak. The detected decline in vaccination rates is also evident in populations that previously routinely vaccinated, which raises significant concern for the future.”
The effects are already visible. There were nearly 3,000 laboratory confirmed measles cases in England in 2024, the highest number of cases recorded annually since 2012. Israel has seen a sharp rise in measles cases in recent months, with over 1,800 reported infections by October, and at least eight deaths in toddlers under 2 ½ years old, all unvaccinated. Until recently, Israel had virtually eliminated measles.
The study identified fear of side effects as the main driver of vaccine hesitancy, a concern that existed before COVID-19 but has intensified since. Ninety-two percent of parents in the UK and 63% in Israel cited this as a reason for refusing or delaying vaccinations. The data also revealed disparities across populations: in the UK, a sharper decline was observed among parents of Asian descent, while in Israel, larger decreases were noted among the ultra-Orthodox and Arab sectors.
The researchers emphasize that even small declines in vaccination rates can undermine herd immunity and lead to renewed outbreaks of infectious diseases. They warn that if this global erosion of confidence is not addressed through clear communication, education, and community-based initiatives, decades of progress in disease prevention could be lost.
Prof. Edelstein concluded: “The data indicate that the impact of the pandemic on public trust in vaccines is not only temporary or local, but rather a broad and deep phenomenon with global implications. Dedicated interventions are needed to restore trust and reduce concerns in order to prevent further deterioration.”
About Bar-Ilan University
Bar-Ilan University is one of Israel’s leading research universities, with ten faculties and over 70 research institutes spanning diverse fields. Home to 24 Israel Prize laureates and numerous internationally acclaimed scholars, the university leads groundbreaking research in AI, sustainability, medical and life sciences, cyber, nanotechnology, and more. The university’s researchers have developed innovations ranging from cancer treatments and clean energy to advanced AI applications and educational technologies. Alongside academic excellence, Bar-Ilan places strong emphasis on community engagement and student well-being, making knowledge and innovation accessible both within and beyond the campus. For more information, visit: https://www.biu.ac.il/en
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2025-10-28
Washington, D.C. – Today, BD², or Breakthrough Discoveries for thriving with Bipolar Disorder, announced its third round of Discovery Research grants, totaling nearly $18 million – expanding a comprehensive global effort to examine the key mechanisms of bipolar disorder. Multidisciplinary teams of scientists and clinicians include leads from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, Mass General Brigham, Weill Cornell Medicine, and the University of Minnesota.
These teams represent a unique cohort of successful Discovery Grantees, as they will all use neuromodulation to explore human neural circuitry in bipolar disorder. These teams will each ...
2025-10-28
Every day, 17 Americans die while waiting for an organ transplant. Opt-out organ donation policies, which enroll everyone into post-mortem donation programs by default unless people choose to opt out, have been touted as a way to increase the supply of desperately needed organs. But opt-out organ donation policies may reduce living organ donations, leaving systems no better supplied with lifesaving organs.
Pascal Güntürkün and colleagues analyzed epidemiological data from 24 countries between 2000–2023 and conducted four experimental ...
2025-10-28
West Lafayette, Ind. – Frailty threatens older individuals because it increases their vulnerability to detrimental health outcomes, such as falling, longer hospitalization, or even shortened life expectancy. New research exploring the linkage between frailty and mortality risk points to retaining gonad function as a potent strategy to fight late-life frailty.
The study conducted by scientists at the Gerald P. Murphy Cancer Foundation’s Center for Exceptional Longevity Studies was published last week in the peer-reviewed scientific journal Scientific Reports.
The ...
2025-10-28
Brain scans from American football players reveal subtle differences in the brain’s outer grooves when compared to scans from otherwise healthy men who never played contact or collision sports, a new study shows. Its authors say the findings could potentially predict which people are more at risk of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).
Like many neurodegenerative diseases, CTE is known to worsen over time, and it afflicts many who play contact and collision sports that involve repeated hits to the head. Popular contact sports include soccer and basketball, while common collision sports are ...
2025-10-28
As populations continue to age, total hip replacement (THR) is becoming an increasingly common surgical procedure. Experts estimate that approximately one million THRs are performed each year worldwide. The surgery is often life-changing, as it can fully restore the function of the hip joint, reduce pain, and allow patients to walk and bear weight again. However, as with any major surgery, the procedure is not without risks, especially for older individuals with other health conditions.
A significant complication following THR is a femoral fracture—a break in the thigh bone near the artificial hip joint. This ...
2025-10-28
Frailty is closely linked to adverse outcomes in older adults, particularly those with heart failure. Numerous epidemiologic studies show that frailty has important prognostic value in this population, underscoring the need for routine assessment. At the same time, the concept of frailty has expanded beyond the physical domain to include cognitive and other dimensions, making comprehensive evaluation increasingly complex and less feasible in everyday practice. The Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS) offers a practical alternative: a 9-point, bedside, visually assessed tool that can be completed in minutes. However, key questions remain—how closely ...
2025-10-28
Aerospace industry has undergone tremendous developments over the last century, with materials science engineers playing a significant role in this transformation. It is well known that as the operating temperature of metallic materials increases, the speed of aircraft can be enhanced and fuel consumption can be reduced. Therefore, research on high-temperature materials has been directly linked to the improvement of aircraft performance and has been actively conducted worldwide since the 1940s.
For more than 80 years, Ni-based alloys have been the primary materials used for high-temperature applications. To enable their use at even higher temperatures, ...
2025-10-28
Fashion trend forecasting helps companies predict which clothes will be popular in upcoming seasons. Traditionally, this has relied on experts’ intuition, experience and creativity. More recently, big-data analysis has been incorporated, offering deeper insights into consumer behavior. However, such methods pose technical barriers and remain out of reach for fashion students or small brands.
Recent developments in artificial intelligence (AI) can balance the scales. Large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT have made big data analysis readily available to the public. LLMs draw ...
2025-10-28
Sinking land is quietly destabilizing urban infrastructure in India’s largest cities, putting thousands of buildings and millions of people at risk, according to Virginia Tech scientists.
Groundwater overuse is a critical driver of the problem, said Susanna Werth, assistant professor of geosciences who co-authored the paper published Oct. 28 in Nature Sustainability.
“When cities pump more water from aquifers than nature can replenish, the ground quite literally sinks,” Werth said. “Our study shows that this overexploitation ...
2025-10-28
Key Messages
In May 2023, devastating floods hit Emilia-Romagna, causing deaths, displacement, and estimated damages of €8.5 billion.
Cul-de-sac effect: The CMCC research team described for the first time how a specific configuration of mountain topography and circulation patterns trapped moisture coming from the Adriatic, while a stationary cyclone fueled prolonged rains that lasted for several days over the same area, leading to extreme flooding.
From the analysis of the Emilia-Romagna case, the ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] New study shows global decline in parental trust in childhood vaccines after COVID-19, contributing to increased measles outbreaks
Bar-Ilan University research finds pandemic skepticism continues to impact immunization rates in Israel and the UK, putting herd immunity at risk