Vancouver Sun

More parents to get their kids seasonal flu shot thanks to COVID-19 pandemic, UBC study finds

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A new study from the University of B.C. suggests the COVID-19 pandemic may be motivating more parents to get their children the seasonal flu vaccine.

Published in the Journal of Pediatrics last week, the study surveyed 3,000 families from Canada, the U.S., Japan, Israel, Spain and Switzerlan­d.

The researcher­s found that 54 per cent of parents planned to vaccinate their kids — up 16 percentage points from the previous year.

The study determined parents were more likely to get their child the flu shot if they thought there was potential for the child to catch COVID-19 and if their child was already up-to-date on other vaccinatio­ns.

Dr. Ran Goldman, the study’s lead author, notes that public health officials around the world are concerned about the potentiall­y harmful combinatio­n of COVID-19 and flu season.

Goldman said immunizing children will be critical in protecting the population from both infections. He said his team was very encouraged by the results of the study, but still would like to see a slightly higher proportion of parents willing to give their kids the flu shot.

Goldman said the threshold for a vaccine to be highly effective is about 70 per cent.

Although he believes that goal can be reached, Goldman said the media and the scientific community must work harder to help dispel myths and disinforma­tion about vaccine use.

“Vaccinatio­n is the world’s greatest public health achievemen­t,” Goldman said, stressing the impact vaccines have had on global mortality rates over the last century.

“If we reach 70 to 80 per cent of the population — not even 100 per cent — I’d be really thrilled.”

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