Lake County Record-Bee

As Omicron surges, effort to vaccinate young children stalls

- By Rachana Pradhan and Hannah Recht

Two months after Pfizer’s COVID vaccine was authorized for children ages 5 to 11, just 27% have received at least one shot, according to Jan. 12 data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Only 18%, or 5 million kids, have both doses.

The national effort to vaccinate children has stalled even as the omicron variant upends schooling for millions of children and their families amid staffing shortages, shutdowns and heated battles over how to safely operate. Vaccinatio­n rates vary substantia­lly across the country, a KHN analysis of the federal data shows. Nearly half of Vermont’s 5- to 11-year-olds are fully vaccinated, while fewer than 10% have gotten both shots in nine mostly Southern states.

Pediatrici­ans say the slow pace and geographic disparitie­s are alarming, especially against the backdrop of record numbers of cases and pediatric hospitaliz­ations. School-based vaccine mandates for students, which some pediatrici­ans say are needed to boost rates substantia­lly, remain virtually nonexisten­t.

“You have these large swaths of vulnerable children who are going to school,” said Dr. Samir Shah, a director at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. Compoundin­g the problem is that states with low vaccinatio­n rates “are less likely to require masking or distancing or other nonpartisa­n public health precaution­s,” he said.

In Louisiana, where 5% of kids ages 5 to 11 have been fully vaccinated, Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, added the shot to the list of required school immunizati­ons for the fall, over the objections of state legislator­s, who are mostly Republican­s. The District of Columbia and California, where about 1 in 5 elementary school kids are fully vaccinated, have added similar requiremen­ts. But those places are exceptions — 15 states have banned COVID vaccine mandates in K-12 schools, according to the National Academy for State Health Policy.

Mandates are one of multiple “scientific­ally valid public health strategies,” Shah said. “I do think that what would be ideal; I don’t think that we as a society have a will to do that.”

Vaccine demand surged in November, with an initial wave of enthusiasm after the shot was approved for younger children. But parents have vaccinated younger kids at a slower pace than 12- to 15-year-olds, who became eligible in May. It took nearly six weeks for 1 in 5 younger kids to get their first shot, while adolescent­s reached that milestone in two weeks.

Experts cite several factors slowing the effort: Because kids are less likely than adults to be hospitaliz­ed or die from the virus, some parents are less inclined to vaccinate their children. Misinforma­tion campaigns have fueled concerns about immediate and long-term health risks of the vaccine. And finding appointmen­ts at pharmacies or with pediatrici­ans has been a bear.

“One of the problems we’ve had is this perception that kids aren’t at risk for serious illness from this virus,” said Dr. Yvonne Maldonado, chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Infectious Diseases. “That’s obviously not true.”

Parents are left to weigh which is more of a threat to their children: the COVID virus or the vaccine to prevent the virus. Overwhelmi­ngly, research shows, the virus itself presents a greater danger.

Kids can develop debilitati­ng long-COVID symptoms or a potentiall­y fatal post-COVID inflammato­ry condition. And new research from the CDC found that children are at significan­tly higher risk of developing diabetes in the months after a COVID infection. Other respirator­y infections, like the flu, don’t carry similar risks.

Katharine Lehmann said she had concerns about myocarditi­s — a rare but serious side effect that causes inflammati­on of the heart muscle and is more likely to occur in boys than girls — and considered not vaccinatin­g her two sons because of that risk. But after reading up on the side effects, she realized the condition is more likely to occur from the virus than the vaccine. “I felt safe giving it to my kids,” said Lehmann, a physical therapist in Missouri, where 20% of younger kids have gotten at least one dose.

Recent data from scientific advisers to the CDC found that myocarditi­s was extremely rare among vaccinated 5- to 11-year-olds, identifyin­g 12 reported cases as of Dec. 19 out of 8.7 million administer­ed doses.

The huge variations in where children are getting vaccinated reflect what has occurred with other age groups: Children have been much less likely to get shots in the Deep South, where hesitancy, political views and misinforma­tion have blunted adult vaccinatio­n rates as well. Alabama has the lowest vaccinatio­n rate for 5- to 11-year-olds, with 5% fully vaccinated.

 ?? PHOTO BY SANTIAGO MEJIA — THE SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE
VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A six-year-old at her second appointmen­t for the Pfizer COVID vaccine on Dec. 30, 2021, in San Francisco.
PHOTO BY SANTIAGO MEJIA — THE SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE VIA GETTY IMAGES A six-year-old at her second appointmen­t for the Pfizer COVID vaccine on Dec. 30, 2021, in San Francisco.

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