The Morning Call

Why you should get your children vaccinated

- J. Nathan Hagstrom chairs the Department of Pediatrics at Lehigh Valley Reilly Children’s Hospital. He is also a pediatric oncologist and hematologi­st.

Nearly two years ago, the world learned of a new virus. In a matter of months, COVID-19 reached pandemic level, impacting our lives in virtually every way possible: our health, our work, our children and our relationsh­ips.

It is something none of us had a choice about. But one simple and effective choice can give us the power to put it behind us.

Vaccines are our best shot.

A year ago, we started vaccinatin­g our colleagues at Lehigh Valley Health Network. That moment brought tears of relief and hope of an end to the COVID-19 ordeal for our front-line staff who worked tirelessly and compassion­ately, and continue to do so.

We’re now offering boosters to our most vulnerable. This month, we began vaccinatin­g 5- to 11-year-olds.

Vaccines are extremely safe. Thank goodness, because they’re essential to maintainin­g a healthy population, especially children.

Vaccines save millions of lives and prevent disability that is unimaginab­le in today’s world. The COVID-19 vaccines proved to be extremely safe as well, and it makes sense.

They use natural means to trigger immunity without all the risks and complicati­ons of getting the disease. The virus that causes COVID-19 is an RNA virus, and some of the vaccines use RNA to trigger immunity.

When you are vaccinated against COVID-19, even if you contract the virus, your body isn’t getting the whole virus, just pieces. With the

RNA vaccines, these pieces are being presented to the immune system in a more natural way, which is one reason they’re more effective.

No vaccine in the history of mankind has been 100% effective — but we’ve still managed to eradicate diseases such as polio and minimize the spread of others such as measles. The COVID-19 vaccines are very effective in preventing serious illness, and they appear to also be effective in preventing spread.

Anecdotall­y, you may hear of someone who got vaccinated and still got COVID-19. It can happen, as it can with any vaccine. In most cases, vaccinated people who got the virus did not die or end up hospitaliz­ed from COVID-19.

Regarding children, some parents weighing their options ask: My child is healthy and not likely to get really sick and end up in the hospital with COVID-19, so why should I vaccinate him/her?

We’ve seen children get seriously ill, and even die, from COVID-19. Pediatric hospitaliz­ations for COVD-19 went up five-fold this summer across Pennsylvan­ia. Nearly 30% of all children hospitaliz­ed did not have underlying health issues.

More children have been sickened and died from the Delta variant than the flu.

Protection also goes beyond the virus itself. Children have been greatly impacted by this pandemic.

They’ve missed birthday parties, important lessons in school, soccer games, time with their grandparen­ts. Every time an unvaccinat­ed child is exposed, they need to quarantine, keeping them from friends and fun.

Let’s also remember 140,000 children have lost a caregiver — moms, dads and grandparen­ts — to COVID-19. Rates of eating disorders, depression and suicidal thoughts among children are at record levels.

Children are resilient, but they need stability and hope. While the brutal toll of the pandemic will reverberat­e for years to come, we have a safe and effective tool to help end this suffering.

Unfortunat­ely, there has been false informatio­n about these vaccines that is causing concerns for parents.

First, there is no impact on fertility. There has been no evidence of that in the millions of people who have gotten the vaccine thus far, and there is no biological reason why it would impact fertility.

Second, vaccines don’t cause brain damage, organ damage or any permanent medical problems to any measurable degree in children. With or without vaccines the risk of developing a rare medical disease is the same.

Vaccines protect people from getting diseases that clearly do cause serious lasting damage and death.

The virus that causes COVID-19 is one of those dangerous viruses that needs to be prevented with vaccines. Among children, the only rare side effect that has been seen with mRNA vaccines is something called myocarditi­s, or inflammati­on of the heart muscle. It’s more common in boys and young men than girls.

It is incredibly rare — and almost always goes away on its own. Data shows you are more likely to get myocarditi­s after getting COVID-19 than after getting the vaccine.

A recent study sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases found the risk of a serious allergic reaction is eight in 1 million.

The COVID-19 vaccines offer an amazing and safe way for all of us to return to a more normal daily life and protect the people we love and rely on.

As you begin to make your holiday and travel plans — make getting vaccinated against COVID-19 and the flu part of that plan.

Together, we can collective­ly make a big impact and steer ourselves out of this pandemic into a more normal endemic with COVID-19 still around, but much more manageable, by getting vaccinated.

 ?? JACOB FORD/AP ?? Daleyza Delgado, 5, receives a COVID-19 vaccine at an elementary school Nov. 10 in Odessa, Texas.
JACOB FORD/AP Daleyza Delgado, 5, receives a COVID-19 vaccine at an elementary school Nov. 10 in Odessa, Texas.
 ?? ?? J. Nathan Hagstrom
J. Nathan Hagstrom

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