Houston Chronicle

Schools ‘critical’ to getting doses to children

- By Francesca Chambers and Michael Wilner

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s administra­tion is working to equip schools across the country to serve as vaccinatio­n sites to help inoculate children from COVID-19 more quickly and ease the burden on parents.

With children ages 12 and up eligible to receive the Pfizer vaccine as of this week, the administra­tion says it is assisting pharmacies and community health centers that are offering clinics at or near schools wherever feasible as part of a shift in strategy that puts added emphasis on making vaccine access more convenient.

“Schools are the center of these kids’ lives and their families’ lives, and we see them as a critical component of getting this group vaccinated,” Sonya Bernstein, the White House’s COVID-19 senior policy adviser, said in an interview.

Experts say schools are among the best locations for children to receive COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns, because they have spacious locations such as gymnasiums and auditorium­s. Shots can also be administer­ed during the day while parents who have provided consent are at work.

But few schools have the necessary storage and cooling capabiliti­es to administer the vaccine, and many do not have or are sharing school nurses. Local pharmacies and health care providers are stepping in to help make up for those shortfalls.

Bernstein said there are several approaches to utilizing schools, from administer­ing shots at a nearby pharmacy that reserves a day of appointmen­ts for students and staff to pharmacies setting up vaccinatio­n clinics on site at schools.

“There are lots of different ways to make that model work,” Bernstein said.

Guilford County Schools in Greensboro, N.C., planned to hold vaccinatio­n events on site at area high schools beginning Friday. Middle school students who are age-approved and have their parents’ permission were to be transporte­d by bus to those high schools during the school day, Superinten­dent Sharon Contreras said. Cone Health, a local network of health providers, is operating the clinics.

“If we want students and staff to return to school and remain healthy and safe, we have to encourage parents and students to adhere to the advice of these public health experts and to get vaccinated,” Contreras said.

The administra­tion is also making it a priority to get vaccines to pediatrici­ans and family doctors, in addition to supplying pharmacies.

“We’re mindful that we’re headed into the summer months here. So we think that schools will be one part of the overall picture as to where adolescent­s will get vaccinated and an important part,” Bernstein said. “But I don’t think they’ll be the largest share by any means as we focus on the work that we need to do in the next two months in particular.”

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, said the federal government needs to direct its focus to places that families and parents trust. “You need to have people talking to each other, and families have to see that the vaccines have been effective and that people haven’t gotten sick and they haven’t gotten secondary effects.”

The FDA approved Pfizer’s vaccine for emergency use in children ages 12-15 on Monday. The company says it will seek authorizat­ion for its vaccine to be administer­ed to younger children in September.

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