The Union Democrat

State gave up on mandating COVID vaccines for students

- Tracy Beth Hoeg Los Angeles Times Tracy Beth Høeg is a research epidemiolo­gist at UC San Francisco and a physician. These views are her own.

A California Supreme Court decision last month reaffirmed that individual school districts lack the authority to require students to be vaccinated against COVID-19. A few weeks before that, officials in Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administra­tion confirmed that they had abandoned plans to require COVID-19 vaccinatio­n of schoolchil­dren, and legislatio­n to similar effect was dropped last year. That means that, at least for the foreseeabl­e future, COVID-19 vaccines are unlikely to be added to the list of 10 inoculatio­ns California requires to attend school.

Some may fear this puts children and communitie­s at unnecessar­y risk. But both our current scientific understand­ing of the COVID-19 vaccines and the drawbacks of mandating them suggest state officials and courts made the right call.

Unlike the other vaccines required for school enrollment in California, the COVID-19 vaccines are unreliable at preventing infection or transmissi­on, providing at best modest protection against infection for only a couple of months.

In contrast, the vaccines already required for school attendance, such as those for measles, mumps, rubella and polio, reliably prevent outbreaks when local vaccinatio­n rates reach a certain threshold. The hepatitis B and varicella (chickenpox) vaccines afford protection against infection for years, diminishin­g long-term transmissi­on risks. The tetanus vaccine provides only individual protection, but it is administer­ed in combinatio­n with vaccines for diphtheria and pertussis, which protect against outbreaks over the long term.

We never had any evidence

that the COVID-19 vaccines would work like vaccines that provide a high degree of lasting protection against infection and transmissi­on, conferring so-called herd immunity. It has been clear that they would not since 2021 and even clearer since the emergence of the omicron variant. One study found that after around five months, the COVID-19 infection rate among vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed adolescent­s ended up being essentiall­y the same. And COVID-19 vaccines do not appear to reduce infected people’s chances of infecting others either.

To be clear, there is good evidence that the COVID-19 vaccines have provided individual protection against severe disease and death. But the risks to most children at this point are slight. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

estimate that over 96% of children have been infected with the virus, and studies continue to show that post-infectious or “natural” immunity is at least as protective as vaccine-induced immunity.

What’s more, a recent study of the omicron variant in England found a COVID-19 death rate in those under 20 of just 2 for every 1 million infections. It also found no children with prior infections had died of a subsequent SARS-COV-2 infection. The Covid-associated condition known as multisyste­m inflammato­ry syndrome in children (MIS-C) has fortunatel­y all but disappeare­d, and high-quality studies continue to demonstrat­e that long COVID-19 is rare among children.

Some children are at higher risk from COVID-19 than others. The absence of a state mandate, however, will not

discourage families and physicians from deciding to vaccinate those children.

My own research team’s riskbenefi­t analyses for children and young adults support individual­ized approaches to COVID vaccinatio­n that weigh expected benefits against known potential side effects. One welldefine­d vaccine-associated risk is myocarditi­s, or inflammati­on of the heart muscle, which occurs disproport­ionately in adolescent and young adult males with potentiall­y serious and lasting consequenc­es. A highqualit­y prospectiv­e study estimated that the side effect would occur in about 1 in 3,000 13- to 18-year-old males who receive second doses of the Pfizer vaccine. A school mandate would therefore require many children to assume known risks for unclear benefits.

For internatio­nal context, schools and universiti­es in Europe are generally not requiring COVID-19 vaccinatio­n. The European CDC is focusing on providing the bivalent booster to those who are 60 and older or have underlying conditions that put them at high risk. Britain is offering boosters only to those who are 50 and older, working in care homes or otherwise at high risk. France just announced that as of next fall, it will not recommend vaccinatio­n of people under 65 who are not deemed to be at high risk.

A statewide vaccine mandate also threatens to return thousands of students to remote schooling. That’s why the Los Angeles Unified School District indefinite­ly postponed its January 2022 deadline for students 12 and older to obtain a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n. It became apparent that more than 30,000 unvaccinat­ed students could be excluded from classrooms, disproport­ionately affecting young people of color who had already suffered substantia­l educationa­l setbacks during the pandemic.

With California’s COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rates hovering around 68% among 12- to 16-year-olds, 38% among 5- to 11-year-olds and just 8% among those under 5, mandating the vaccines in California schools could exacerbate declining public school enrollment, further jeopardizi­ng the budgets of struggling districts whose students are, again, disproport­ionately the most vulnerable.

Restoring public trust requires practices that weigh the expected gains of any interventi­on against potential harms. A school vaccinatio­n mandate for COVID-19 would not substantia­lly reduce the health risks to our children or communitie­s, but it could unnecessar­ily exclude students from classrooms where they need to be.

 ?? Myung J. Chun / Los Angelestim­es ?? A nurse gives an 8-year-old girl a COVID-19 vaccine at Arleta High School in 2021.
Myung J. Chun / Los Angelestim­es A nurse gives an 8-year-old girl a COVID-19 vaccine at Arleta High School in 2021.

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