Antelope Valley Press

Child vaccinatio­ns begin in California with toys, gifts

- By JOCELYN GECKER and TERENCE CHEA

SAN JOSE — Scavenger hunts and blowup animals greeted children at some of California’s vaccinatio­n sites, Wednesday, as children aged five to 11 got their first COVID-19 shots a day after the federal government approved kid-size doses of the vaccinatio­ns.

One enthusiast­ic 11-year-old summed up his experience in a word: “Amazing!” said sixth-grader Raghab Vist. “I’ve been waiting a really long time to get vaccinated.”

Vist and his father, Hemant, who went to a vaccine clinic in San Jose, spoke of all the things they looked forward to doing again — eating in a restaurant, taking a train and traveling to family favorites like Disneyland. “It’s a very important milestone for us,” his father said.

As part of an ambitious plan to offer Coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns to California’s 3.5 million children in that age group, the state intends to offer the vaccines at locations including school clinics, pharmacies, pediatrici­an offices and county sites, many of which will launch in the coming days. Health officials said they are expecting 1.2 million initial doses of the pediatric vaccine.

Santa Clara County, the home of Silicon Valley where San Jose is located, starting doling out shots early Wednesday, and appointmen­ts quickly booked up. The county expects to receive about 55,000 doses this week and will open additional clinics at 80 school sites and send out mobile vaccine teams to low-income neighborho­ods.

“We know that a lot of parents are anxious to get their children vaccinated with the holidays coming up,” said Dr. Jennifer Tong, who oversees the county’s mass vaccinatio­n program. “We received our shipment of vaccine yesterday, and we didn’t have any good reason to sit on it. So we said, let’s get this show on the road.”

Many of Santa Clara’s county sites were decorated with child-friendly motifs like animals and included games like scavenger hunts, while others handed out coloring books, prizes and stickers to newly vaccinated young people.

Some pop-up clinics in Los Angeles County also started giving doses to children, on Wednesday, the county department of health said. The county is the nation’s most populous with 10 million residents, including about 900,000 children between five and 11 years old.

California’s vaccinatio­n website, myturn.ca.gov, is expected to start offering appointmen­ts for this age group, today. Several other counties, including Contra Costa and Marin in Northern California, planned to begin their rollout at mass vaccinatio­n sites, this weekend.

California has one of the highest vaccinatio­n rates in the country, but a vocal minority remain skeptical of both the vaccine and the government’s assurances of its safety. Last month, more than 1,000 people gathered at the state Capitol to protest vaccine mandates.

California has had some of the strictest masking and vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts in the country, but new cases and hospitaliz­ations have been climbing again. In the last two weeks new cases have risen by 11% and the number of hospitaliz­ations has increased by more than 200. State models predict continued increases in hospitaliz­ations as colder weather and holidays drive people inside.

Gov. Gavin Newsom announced last month that California would have the nation’s first Coronaviru­s vaccine mandate for schoolchil­dren — about 6.7 million public and private school students in the nation’s most populous state — once the federal government has given final approval for the shots. The mandate will be phased in and will likely not take full effect until next July.

Newsom hailed the new availabili­ty Wednesday, saying the pandemic “has taken a heavy toll on the well-being of our kids.”

Kid-sized doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine cleared two final hurdles, Tuesday: a recommenda­tion from advisers with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, followed by a green light from Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the CDC.

The federal government has promised enough vaccine to protect the nation’s 28 million kids in this age group, with many enthusiast­ic parents rushing to get their younger children inoculated before the holiday season.

Some Kaiser Permanente hospitals in Northern California will start offering the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine to children as soon as Monday, officials said.

“Now parents can kind of take a collective sigh of relief,” said Dr. Keedra McNeill, a Kaiser pediatrici­an and mother of two daughters ages six and eight.

Kaiser, one of the nation’s largest health care providers, participat­ed in the Pfizer pediatric vaccine trial in Northern California, which found the vaccine for children ages five to 11 had an efficacy rate of over 90%, said Dr. Nicola Klein, director of the chain’s vaccine study center.

“We’ve been doing clinical trials for 30 years and I feel very comfortabl­e and confident that the clinical trials that were done for these children, children ages five to 11 were ... done with the same high-quality standards that have been done for all the other vaccines that we’ve been studying for the last 30 years,” she said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Finn Washburn, nine, shows his vaccinatio­n site as his mother, Kate Elsley, takes a photo, Wednesday, shortly after he received a Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine in San Jose. The US entered a new phase, Wednesday, in its COVID-19 vaccinatio­n campaign, with shots now available to millions of elementary-age children.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Finn Washburn, nine, shows his vaccinatio­n site as his mother, Kate Elsley, takes a photo, Wednesday, shortly after he received a Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine in San Jose. The US entered a new phase, Wednesday, in its COVID-19 vaccinatio­n campaign, with shots now available to millions of elementary-age children.

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