Albany Times Union (Sunday)

As shots for kids stall, appeal goes to parents

Children who are unvaccinat­ed a big source of spread

- By Jan Hoffman

For weeks, the school principal had been imploring Kemika Cosey: Would she please allow her children, ages 7 and 11, to get COVID shots?

Cosey remained firm. A hard no. But “Mr. Kip” — Brigham Kiplinger, principal of Garrison Elementary School in Washington, D.C. — swatted away the “no.”

Since the federal government authorized the coronaviru­s vaccine for children ages 5-11 nearly three months ago, Kiplinger has been calling the school’s parents, texting, nagging and cajoling daily. “The vaccine is the most important thing happening this year to keep kids in school,” Kiplinger said.

As the omicron variant has stormed through U.S. classrooms, sending students home and, in some cases, to the hospital, the rate of vaccinatio­n overall for America’s 28 million children ages 5-11 remains even lower than health experts had feared.

According to a new analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation based on federal data, only 18.8 percent are fully vaccinated, and 28.1 percent have received one dose.

The disparity of rates among states is stark.

In Vermont, the share of children who are fully vaccinated is 52 percent; in Mississipp­i, it is 6 percent.

After the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine was authorized for younger children in late October, the outof-the-gate surge in demand lasted a scant few weeks.

It peaked just before Thanksgivi­ng, then dropped precipitou­sly and has since stalled. It hovers at 50,000 to 75,000 new doses a day.

Public health officials say persuading parents to get younger children vaccinated is crucial not only to sustaining in-person education but also to containing the pandemic overall.

With adult vaccinatio­n hitting a ceiling — 74 percent of Americans ages 18 and older are fully vaccinated — unvaccinat­ed elementary school children remain a large, turbulent source of spread.

 ?? Erin Schaff / New York Times ?? Brigham Kiplinger, principal at Garrison Elementary School in Washington, greets students as they arrive. Getting more young school-age children vaccinated is crucial for ending the pandemic, public health officials say, and many are focusing on that group.
Erin Schaff / New York Times Brigham Kiplinger, principal at Garrison Elementary School in Washington, greets students as they arrive. Getting more young school-age children vaccinated is crucial for ending the pandemic, public health officials say, and many are focusing on that group.

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