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SECTION F | STUDENT
- SECTION FA | Equal Education Opportunity
- SECTION FB | Admissions
- SECTION FC | Attendance
- SECTION FD | Tuition and Fees
- SECTION FE | Financial Aid
- SECTION FF | Student Welfare
- SECTION FF.1 | Campus Safety
- SECTION FF.2 | Mental Health
- SECTION FFA | Immunizations
- SECTION FFA.1 | Immunizations
- SECTION FFA.2 | International Students
- SECTION FFA.3 | Residence Life Requirement
- SECTION FFB | AIDS/HIV
- SECTION FFB.1 | AIDS/HIV
- SECTION FFC | Student Support Services
- SECTION FFC.1 | Student Support Services and Administrative Services
- SECTION FFC.2 | Veterans Services
- SECTION FFC.3 | Special Programs for Students with Disabilities
- SECTION FFC.4 | Pregnancy and Parenting Student
- SECTION FFD | Freedom from Discrimination, Harassment, and Retaliation
- SECTION FFD.1 | Harassment, Intimidation, and Bullying
- SECTION FFD.2 | Sexual Assault and Intimate Partner or Domestic/Dating Violence/Clery Reporting
- SECTION FFD.3 | Student Discrimination Grievance Procedure
- SECTION FFE | Sexual Misconduct Policy
- SECTION FG | Student Housing
- SECTION FH | Solicitation
- SECTION FI | Student Records
- SECTION FJ | Student Activities
- SECTION FK | Student Rights and Responsibilities
- SECTION FKA | Student Expression
- SECTION FKA.1 | Student Expression
- SECTION FKB | Student Conduct
- SECTION FKB.1 | Code of Student Conduct/Special Programs/Student Misconduct/Drug-Free Campus/Complicity
- SECTION FKB.2 | Disciplinary Procedures and Sanctions
- SECTION FKB.3 | Academic Integrity
- SECTION FKC | Student Complaints and Grievances
- SECTION FKC.1 | Student Grievance Procedures
- SECTION FKC.2 | Student-Instructor Conflict Resolution
- SECTION FKD | Grade Challenge
- SECTION FKD.1 | Grade Challenge
- SECTION FKD.2 | Program of Study Dismissal
- SECTION FL | Athletics
SECTION FFA.1
STUDENT
STUDENT WELFARE
IMMUNIZATIONS
Procedure
BACTERIAL MENINGITIS PROCEDURES
Requirement for Bacterial Meningitis Vaccinations
Bacterial Meningitis is a serious, potentially deadly disease that can progress extremely quickly. It is an inflammation of the membranes that surround the brain and spinal cord. The bacteria that causes meningitis can also infect the blood. This disease strikes about 370 Americans each year which is a decrease in the number of people infected due to people getting vaccinated. In 2016, there were 72 confirmed cases for youth between the ages of 16 and 23 years of age; 32 of these students attended college. Treatment for the disease is available, but severe health problems or disabilities are still possible.
Effective January 1, 2012, all entering students are required to show evidence of an initial bacterial meningitis vaccine or a booster dose during the five-year period preceding, and at least 10 days prior to, the first day of the first semester in which the student initially enrolls at a Texas higher education institution.
Under justifiable circumstances, an institution may grant extensions to individual students to delay the compliance date to no more than 10 days after the first day of the semester (or other term) in which the student initially enrolls.
An entering student includes a first-time student of a Texas public institution of higher education or private or independent institution and includes a transfer student or a student who previously attended an institution of higher education before January 1, 2012, and who is enrolling in the same or another institution of higher education following a break in enrollment of at least one fall or spring semester.
For more information on immunization requirements for students at institutions of higher education, visit the Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) website.
Exemptions to the Vaccination Requirement
A student is not required to submit evidence of receiving the vaccination against bacterial meningitis if the student meets any of the following criteria:
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A student is not required to submit evidence of receiving the vaccination against bacterial meningitis if the student submits to the institution:
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For public junior college students only: the secure on-line exemption form is available at DSHS exemption form. According to DSHS rules, a copy of the form must be submitted to the designated school official at the institution the student will be attending.
Exemption Form Q&A
DSHS has certain requirements about the handling of the exemption form as described below.
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Meningococcal Serogroup B (MenB)
The meningitis college entry requirement of the Texas Administrative Code states that students must receive a "bacterial meningitis vaccination." At the time that the rule and enabling statute took effect, only two types of bacterial meningitis vaccines were available to students: meningococcal conjugate vaccine (MenACWY) and meningococcal polysaccharide vaccine (MPSV4). According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), MenACWY is the vaccine recommended for this age group of college students. However, both vaccines, MenACWY and MPSV4, protect against the same four strains of bacterial meningitis (A, C, W and Y).
Recently two additional vaccines became available that offer protection from strains of meningococcal serogroup B, commonly known as MenB. The CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommends MenB vaccinations for certain at-risk populations.
Students should consult a physician or medical practitioner to determine the optimum vaccination protocol for their individual needs. It is important to note that vaccinations for MenACWY and MenB are not interchangeable. MenB vaccines do not provide protection for MenACWY strains, and MenACWY vaccines do not provide protection for MenB strains.
Please consult the CDC website for the latest information on recommended vaccines, https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/vpd/mening.
Institutional Responsibilities
All public and private higher education institutions in Texas are required to notify new entering students about bacterial meningitis and document students’ receipt of that information. See the document below for additional guidance.
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Multiple methods are suggested as the best means to ensure provision of important information and confirmation of information receipt, for example, online, postcards, electronic and paper application forms, student orientation, advisor forms, posters, etc..
Statutory and Regulatory Authority
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Statutory Authority
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Texas Education Code Sec. 51.9191 and 51.9192
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Regulatory Authority
Inquiries regarding THECB guidance on Bacterial Meningitis vaccinations should be
directed to
andrew.lofters@highered.texas.gov.
Approved: 2015
Updated: 2021, 2024
Reviewed: