The Hamilton Spectator

Faith-based schools lag in vaccinatio­ns

- KATE MCCULLOUGH KATE MCCULLOUGH IS A REPORTER COVERING EDUCATION AT THE SPECTATOR. KMCCULLOUG­H@THESPEC.COM

Low vaccinatio­n rates at private Christian high schools in Hamilton suggest religion plays a role in parents’ decisions to immunize children against COVID-19.

Seven of the 10 schools with the lowest per cent of students fully vaccinated against COVID are Christian schools, the lowest — Living Hope Christian School on the Mountain — with a vaccine coverage of about 18 per cent.

An eighth school — Cairn Christian School in Stoney Creek — finished just outside of the bottom 10 at 40 per cent.

“There’s a few people who are very adamant about vaccinatio­n … and then there are a few who you would plunk into the anti-vax grouping,” said Cairn executive director Kevin Huinink. “Everyone else seems to be kind of keeping quiet because they don’t want to be pegged one way or another.”

Huinink said at least two-thirds of students come from outside of Hamilton, meaning only about 10 students are included in the data.

Public health says its data only includes eligible students who live in Hamilton. For some private schools with students from multiple jurisdicti­ons, the sample size would be quite small.

Adam Kloostra, principal at Rehoboth Christian School in Copetown where 30.9 per cent of students are vaccinated, said he “wouldn’t want to speculate” on the values and beliefs of families at the school.

“Our purpose is to assist parents in educating their children,” he said in an email. “We leave private medical decisions to families and we strive to respect the differing views that do exist.”

Not all faith-based schools in Hamilton share this vaccine hesitancy. Two schools — Hamilton District Christian High (HDCH) in Ancaster and Calvin Christian School on the Mountain — ranked in the top third of the list.

At HDCH, 72.9 per cent of students are immunized.

“As every community does, we have a range of views in our community about COVID vaccinatio­ns and the rate probably reflects that distributi­on of views,” principal Duncan Todd said.

Todd said the school attracts students from across the city. About 40 per cent of students reside outside of Hamilton, and are not counted in the statistics.

Two additional faith-based schools, Islamic School of Hamilton and Hamilton Hebrew Academy, are also among the bottom 10. Secular private schools have higher rates, with Hillfield Strathalla­n at 85.4 per cent and Columbia Internatio­nal at 79.5 per cent.

In September, the city launched Faith in Vaccine, a campaign aimed at promoting immunizati­on among faith communitie­s. Deirdre Pike, a senior social planner at the Social Planning and Research Council of Hamilton, said a campaign aimed at promoting vaccines in faith communitie­s had a “broad reach,” but that it’s “hard to track the full impact of it locally.”

Faith in Vaccine was born when Pike began to observe “connection­s” in communitie­s “that already have a background in not thinking that science and religion go together.”

“Now that I see the numbers, I regret that I didn’t work harder to find someone from one of these Christian communitie­s to be a spokespers­on,” she said.

Dr. Peter Juni, head of the Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table, said in the next 12 months, an estimated one in 75 unvaccinat­ed people in their 40s will end up in the hospital, and one in 900 will die.

“Everybody who doesn’t get vaccinated is foolhardy with their own lives,” he told the Spectator. “It’s just tragic, and entirely unnecessar­y.”

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