USA TODAY US Edition

Parents want kids vaccinated on sly. Bad idea, docs say

- Marco della Cava

Mimi Allen has two daughters, 14 and 10. She is raising them alone. They are her world.

So while the Phoenix financial adviser doesn’t usually go for rulebreaki­ng, she recently decided to slip into a local pharmacy and get her younger daughter a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccinatio­n, which is approved only for those 12 and older.

Allen told her immunocomp­romised daughter the plan, fibbed about her child’s age at the counter and walked out relieved.

“I’m a mother who needs to keep her children safe, and if the governor here had mandated masks in school I might have thought differentl­y,” said Allen, 55, who declined to give her daughters’ names out of concern for any backlash. “I’m an ethical person. But after my daughters, my concern is me. If they get it and pass it on and I’m hospitaliz­ed or dead, my kids are in trouble.”

Allen’s quandary is shared by millions of Americans who, as schools go back in session, ponder the best way to keep their vaccine-ineligible young ones safe as the delta variant continues its rampage and some state leaders resist in-school mask mandates.

Having a child under 12 get the vaccine raises medical and ethical questions and can bring justificat­ions that can range from understand­able to specious. Among the former: Children with underlying conditions deserve a shot considerin­g the alternativ­e. The latter: With many people declining the vaccine one might as well use a dose, although doses are still needed for at-risk adult holdouts.

When asked their opinion, doctors and ethicists gave USA TODAY a unanimous verdict: Though the temptation is understand­able, getting a child the COVID-19 vaccine introduces risks that may outweigh the benefits.

“I know there’s a lot of anxiety out there, but it really doesn’t justify going outside the lines,” said Dr. Sean O’Leary, an infectious diseases specialist at Children’s Hospital Colorado in Aurora. “The No. 1 issue with any vaccine is safety for the patient.”

O’Leary is a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics, whose CEO recently sent a letter to the Food and Drug Administra­tion urging the agency to speed approval of vaccines for those under 12. Most experts predict that could come as early as this fall.

The urgency for full approval

The FDA is racing the clock on a few fronts. When it comes to adults, some Americans have said they will get a shot only when the agency gives full, versus just emergency, approval of the vaccines. The Biden administra­tion has said that may happen next month.

And for kids, delaying even emergency approval raises the stakes as hospitals increasing­ly see younger unvaccinat­ed patients. Last week saw the largest leap since the pandemic began of pediatric COVID-19 cases, about 72,000 from 39,000 the previous week, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics. Doctors in hard-hit states such as Kentucky and Texas report that some children are being put on ventilator­s.

So there’s little surprise some parents are mulling taking matters into their own hands and jumping the line.

Dr. Peter Hotez of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston has “sympathy for parents just trying to make the best decisions they can based on many government leaders who are unwilling to protect them.” Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has banned mask mandates, a decision that is being challenged in court and defied by a number of county school districts.

But Hotez believes the answer isn’t to sneak younger kids in for a shot. Rather, he urges parents to put their anger and frustratio­n into fighting for mask mandates while the FDA continues its research.

“The FDA is working as expeditiou­sly as possible, but the reason we’re conservati­ve with kids is because if you get things wrong, the stakes are higher,” said Hotez, who also is co-director of the Center for Vaccine Developmen­t at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston.

Dr. Stuart Finder, director of the Center for Healthcare Ethics at Cedars Sinai in Los Angeles, seconds that note of caution.

As a father of three, he said he understand­s the heightened sense of concern many parents are experienci­ng, but that shouldn’t mean abandoning a sense of trust in the science that produced the vaccines themselves.

“Time is a weird thing,” he said, noting that only eight months have passed since the FDA granted emergency approval for the vaccines for adults, a millisecon­d in scientific research terms. By comparison, it took about 50 years of developmen­t for a polio vaccine to finally be approved in 1952, ending a scourge of its day.

Asked what he would tell parents, Finder offers advice that may prove difficult to act on in these fraught political times. Given that medical experts agree that masks help cut the risk of getting COVID-19, he encourages parents have kids wear masks while they themselves engage in discussion­s with friends and relatives about what is important to them. “We have to find some mutual understand­ing,” he said.

Another bit of advice comes from Nancy Berlinger, research scholar at The Hastings Center, an independen­t bioethics institute in Garrison, New York. Put simply: “Before you lie to a pharmacist about your kid’s age, call or video chat your physician and get some informatio­n about why this vaccine is not yet approved for kids.”

Berlinger has an 11-year-old niece and would love to know she’s protected from COVID-19. But she doesn’t hesitate when asked if there are any circumstan­ces in which slipping her niece into the vaccine queue would be OK.

“Well, lying is wrong. We tell children not to do that,” she said. “Involving your child in this lie seems hard to justify. It doesn’t seem worth it, as a parent, to be forced into a lie, falsify a medical record and perhaps get false benefits from the vaccine, all when the FDA may well fasttrack this for kids soon.”

‘I don’t feel unethical at all’

When Arizona mom Allen decided her youngest needed the vaccine despite it not being approved for her age group, she told her daughter the plan. They set off together and have not looked back.

“I don’t feel unethical at all, especially when many adults are refusing the shot,” Allen said. “My kid is compromise­d in terms of her health. I’ve had clients, friends and family members die from COVID-19. It’s real.”

After getting her youngest vaccinated, Allen decided to announce the news to those who follow her on Facebook. “My point was just trying to get her friends to consider getting vaccinated,” she said.

Some of Allen’s family and friends are vocal about being anti-vaccine, she said, and they simply didn’t comment on her post.

“I’m not saying everyone should take the same action. It’s different for everyone,” Allen said. But, she said, a few friends direct-messaged her after the post “asking me how I got this done. In one family I know, the mother had a breakthrou­gh case, and then the daughter got COVID-19. She wrote, ‘I wish I’d done what you did.’ ”

 ?? CHRIS GRANGER/AP ?? With COVID-19 cases soaring, states are taking different approaches to resuming classes.
CHRIS GRANGER/AP With COVID-19 cases soaring, states are taking different approaches to resuming classes.
 ?? RICK BOWMER/AP ?? Lucie Phillips, 6, joins parents and students for a back-to-school rally Aug. 6 in Salt Lake City.
RICK BOWMER/AP Lucie Phillips, 6, joins parents and students for a back-to-school rally Aug. 6 in Salt Lake City.

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