Los Gatos Weekly Times

How’s California doing vaccinatin­g 5- to 11-year-olds for COVID-19?

- By John Woolfolk and Harriet Blair Rowan

In the nearly three weeks since U.S. regulators cleared COVID-19 vaccines for kids ages 5-11, more than one in 10 of those children in California have rolled up their sleeves for the shots.

But those kids are concentrat­ed in the state’s urban coastal counties. In the Bay Area, about one out of four kids in the biggest counties have already had their first shot, and an astounding 40% in Marin, once a hotbed of resistance to child vaccinatio­n. But far fewer in rural areas have been inoculated.

State health officials see vaccinatin­g kids as key to blunting a feared winter infection surge, and some school districts, including Oakland, will require older students to be vaccinated to attend class starting in January.

“Vaccine administra­tion to California children ages 5-11 is off to a strong start, with more than 300,000 first doses administer­ed in the first two weeks,” the California Department of Public Health said. “We are encouraged by this progress but continue to urge families — from young kids to grandparen­ts — to get vaccinated, complete their vaccinatio­n series, and get a booster once eligible to strengthen their protection against COVID-19 in time for the holidays.”

It’s hard to say how California compares nationally, as the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as of Nov. 19 was still in the process of reporting figures for that age

group by state. California as of Nov. 19 reported 11% of children 5-11 having a first shot of the vaccine. Illinois reported 12.4% with at least one shot in that age group, and Texas 7.4%.

Among California’s five most populous counties — all outside the Bay Area — none reported vaccinatio­n rates for kids 5-11 that were higher than the state’s 11% average. Los Angeles reported 10% had gotten a shot.

By contrast, Marin County was the runaway leader with 40.4% of kids ages 5-11 having at least one of the two Pfizer shots, which are given three weeks apart at a third of the dosage for teens and adults.

Marin County Health Officer Dr. Matt Willis credited the high numbers to strong public interest in the vaccines and collaborat­ion with local schools to make them readily available.

“It was a super high priority for us,” Willis said. “There was a lot of excitement built up in Marin for when our kids were finally eligible for vaccinatio­n, and we did a lot of preparatio­n.”

The five most populous Bay Area counties have vaccinatio­n rates at least twice those in the big Southern California counties: 26.9% in San Francisco, 24.6% in Alameda, 24.5% in Santa Clara, 22% in San Mateo and 21.5% in Contra Costa.

In Santa Clara County, vaccine officer Dr. Marty Fenstershe­ib said child immunizati­ons are shifting from mass vaccinatio­n sites to school clinics, but interest has remained steady.

“We’ve heard for a long time a lot of parents were excited about the opportunit­y to get their young kids vaccinated,” Fenstershe­ib

said.

It’s a different story in most of California’s rural interior, where many counties had vaccinatio­n rates for 5- to 11-year-olds under 5%.

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Nov. 16 visited Kings County, where the vaccinatio­n rate Nov. 19 stood at 2.7%, to promote vaccines at a school in Avenal. He bemoaned what he called disinforma­tion about the safety of the shots, adding that he’s had the vaccine and a booster shot and that his 12-year-old had been vaccinated a few weeks ago and his 9-yearold was getting the jab later that day.

“In order to attend schools like this you’ve had to get 10 vaccinatio­ns,” Newsom told reporters, noting the array of immunizati­ons for diseases like chickenpox and measles that the state already requires for public school attendance. “Vaccinatio­ns have been around for a century. They’re safe.”

Newsom announced Oct. 1 that California will add the COVID-19 vaccine to the list of required immunizati­ons to attend schools once they are fully approved by federal regulators for school-aged children.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion has fully approved Pfizer’s vaccine for ages 16 and older, but has so far authorized it only for emergency use in kids 5-15. Given the expected federal approval timeline, Newsom said the statewide requiremen­t for children, which is to roll out separately for primary and secondary grades, likely won’t begin until the start of the 2022-23 school year.

 ?? RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Registered nurse Navneet Chouhan, left, with Contra Costa Health Services (CCHS), puts a bandaid to Venus Basaee, 6, after she got the COVID-19 vaccine as her mother Mojgan Deldari looks on during a school-base vaccine clinic at Nystrom Elementary Auditorium in Richmond on Nov. 9. The COVID-19 vaccine is now available for kids ages 5-11. The kickoff vaccinatio­n is the first in a series of mobile vaccine clinics held by CCHS. The flu shot was also available.
RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF ARCHIVES Registered nurse Navneet Chouhan, left, with Contra Costa Health Services (CCHS), puts a bandaid to Venus Basaee, 6, after she got the COVID-19 vaccine as her mother Mojgan Deldari looks on during a school-base vaccine clinic at Nystrom Elementary Auditorium in Richmond on Nov. 9. The COVID-19 vaccine is now available for kids ages 5-11. The kickoff vaccinatio­n is the first in a series of mobile vaccine clinics held by CCHS. The flu shot was also available.

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