The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Vaccinatio­ns key to opening schools

Every day students are out adds to remediatio­n crisis we will face.

- By Irwin Redlener

There can be no doubt that President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris are committed to reopening America’s schools as rapidly as possible. As early as the first week in December, then-president-elect Biden announced that he planned to at least partly reopen most of the nation’s schools within the first 100 days of his presidency.

Guidelines released last month by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) underscore this commitment to get most schools open as soon as possible. But the agency’s recommenda­tions are soft, hardly reflecting the urgency justified by the damage to the education of millions of children caused by prolonged disruption of full-time, in-school learning.

The CDC recommenda­tions seem to depend on schools enforcing a range of public health guidelines like masking, distancing, hygiene and sufficient ventilatio­n. Unfortunat­ely, getting anything close to full and effective adoption of these recommenda­tions in the near future is remote. The CDC also gives surprising­ly short shrift to the issue of ensuring effective ventilatio­n in all classrooms that would be utilized by teachers and students.

But my principal concern is that the guidelines should be much stronger when it comes to vaccinatin­g teachers.

The CDC states that vaccinatio­ns for teachers should be available “as soon as supply allows.” But as of now, at least 10 to 15 million doses of vaccine are on shelves and could be available to the nation’s 3.7 million public- and private-school K-12 teachers and fewer than 2 million school administra­tors and staff. This would give educators a muchneeded sense of confidence that they would be safe and protected in schools, especially with increased efforts to make classrooms compliant with essential public health guidelines.

It’s true that the federal government has essentiall­y no authority to require local school districts to enforce any particular protocols, but I was hoping to see much stronger recommenda­tions on vaccinatio­ns as part of the new guidelines.

Importantl­y, teachers themselves — truly essential workers — overwhelmi­ngly want to be vaccinated before returning to the classroom. A recent survey conducted by Hart Research Associates for the American Federation of Teachers showed that 83% of U.S. teachers agree that school faculty and staff should be given priority for receiving the coronaviru­s vaccine.

And the two factors they considered most essential to opening schools safely were universal mask-wearing and vaccinatin­g school staff. These data should come as no surprise since more than onethird of teachers stated that they have a preexistin­g medical condition and 48% have a COVID-19 high-risk person living in their household.

I realize that the weight of scientific evidence supports the CDC’S position that schools can, in fact, be reopened safely even if teachers and staff are not vaccinated — provided that non-pharmaceut­ical guidelines are strictly followed. But the issue of teachers being vaccinated goes beyond what is simply consistent with the state of science and what we currently know about the behavior of the SARS-COV-2 virus.

For instance, we understand that the transmissi­on of the virus in schools is limited and, in most cases, far less than seen in the communitie­s surroundin­g most schools. And we know that children are far less likely to be infected or fall gravely ill from COVID-19 than adults. But the fact is that our state of knowledge about the pandemic remains in flux. As emerging variants of the virus are being seen with alarming frequency, no one can say for sure what’s headed our way.

We must not dismiss the anxiety and personal vulnerabil­ity teachers feel about returning to school. To be sure, there are many other essential workers who deserve to be vaccine-prioritize­d because they are as exposed and vulnerable to COVID-19 as are teachers. Public transporta­tion operators, grocery and pharmacy clerks and people who deliver essential goods are themselves at daily risk from coronaviru­s exposure. These risks are real and must be addressed as a matter of equity and fairness.

Still, the issue of reopening schools carries an additional grave societal concern. The massive pandemic-related disruption of K-12 education is the greatest educationa­l challenge in modern American history. Even if every child in the country returned to full-time, in-person school tomorrow, getting every student back on a successful educationa­l trajectory will present a challenge unlike any we’ve ever faced in the U.S.

Well before the pandemic, wide intractabl­e educationa­l gaps existed between white and non-white students, and between children from low-income families and those from more affluent environmen­ts. Now, increasing absenteeis­m among students struggling to learn remotely, as well as those attending hybrid, part-time in-person classes is exacerbati­ng the gaps and challenges facing millions of children struggling to keep up with their educations.

Every day that children are denied regular, full-day school adds to the remediatio­n crisis we’ll inevitably face once educationa­l normalcy is reestablis­hed. This does not bode well for students increasing­ly left behind — or, for that matter, America’s capacity to handle the challenges awaiting us in the coming decades.

If vaccinatin­g teachers and school staff will help accelerate getting children back in classrooms, what are we waiting for?

Irwin Redlener, M.D., is the founding director, National Center for Disaster Preparedne­ss at Columbia University’s Earth Institute, as well as a senior research scholar. He is also the author of “Americans at Risk: Why We’re Not Prepared for Megadisast­ers and What We Can Do Now,” and “The Future of Us: What the Dreams of Children Mean for 21st Century America.”

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A recent survey conducted by Hart Research Associates for the American Federation of Teachers showed that 83% of U.S. teachers agree that school faculty and staff should be given priority for receiving the coronaviru­s vaccine.
CHARLES KRUPA/ASSOCIATED PRESS A recent survey conducted by Hart Research Associates for the American Federation of Teachers showed that 83% of U.S. teachers agree that school faculty and staff should be given priority for receiving the coronaviru­s vaccine.
 ??  ?? Irwin Redlener
Irwin Redlener

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