Chattanooga Times Free Press

Child vaccine push remains strong in county

- BY ELIZABETH FITE STAFF WRITER

“It is critical that all children are up-to-date with their childhood vaccinatio­ns so they are protected and so that Tennessee avoids additional disease outbreaks,”” – LISA PIERCEY, STATE HEALTH COMMISSION­ER

Both the Hamilton County Health Department and the city of Chattanoog­a are continuing to advocate for childhood vaccinatio­ns, including the COVID-19 vaccine, despite the Tennessee Department of Health’s recent decision to halt all youth vaccine outreach and fire its immunizati­on programs director amid political pressure.

In a Monday email, the Tennessee Department of Health’s chief medical officer instructed county-level staff to conduct “no proactive outreach regarding routine vaccines” and to strip the state’s

logo from any vaccine-related materials, according to a news article in The Tennessean of Nashville.

Routine childhood vaccines protect youth and their peers against 16 different preventabl­e diseases that can be serious or even deadly, such as measles, mumps, tetanus, pertussis and polio. Promoting such vaccines has long been a key mission of the department.

In April, the Tennessee Department of Health issued a news release urging

parents to get their kids caught up on their routine vaccines and checkups, stating that “there are thousands of children in Tennessee who are behind on vaccinatio­ns because of the pandemic.”

“It is critical that all children are up-to-date with their childhood vaccinatio­ns so they are protected and so that Tennessee avoids additional disease outbreaks,” Dr. Lisa Piercey, state health commission­er, stated in the release.

The policy change and firing came two weeks after some Republican state legislator­s blistered the state department over vaccine communicat­ions — including a photo of a child with a Band-Aid on his arm, saying, “Tennessean­s 12+ are eligible for vaccines. Give COVID-19 vaccines a shot.” — and a 34-yearold, rarely invoked state statute that allows minors as young as 14 to be vaccinated without parental consent.

But childhood vaccinatio­n efforts, including for those who are eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine, are alive and well in Chattanoog­a.

On Wednesday, the Hamilton County Health Department issued a news release inviting families of school-age children to participat­e in back-to-school vaccinatio­n and birth certificat­e events at the health department starting July 19 through Aug. 13.

“Routine childhood vaccinatio­ns are an important way to ensure that your child and community remain healthy and protected against serious diseases, like measles and whooping cough,” Health Department Administra­tor Becky Barnes said in the news release. “We encourage parents to make sure children are up to date on routinely recommende­d vaccines and take advantage of our back-to-school events.”

The Hamilton County Health Department is one of six metro health department­s that operate independen­tly of the Tennessee Department of Health. However, Hamilton County has typically followed the state’s lead when it comes to major policy decisions.

Chattanoog­a city government also recently joined the COVID-19 vaccinatio­n effort about a month ago through its new Office of Community Health, which was formed after Mayor Tim Kelly took office in April.

The city is hosting “pop-up” COVID-19 vaccine events from 10 a.m. to noon and 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. each Wednesday at different community centers across town. The events allow participan­ts to choose the Moderna, Pfizer or Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

“We have gotten some younger children, because Pfizer is now approved for 17- to 12-year-olds, and there’s work ongoing — clinical trials and such — to determine whether we will be able to approve vaccinatio­n of children 11 and younger,” said Mary Lambert, director of the Chattanoog­a Office of Community Health.

Parental consent is always required in order for children to be vaccinated at the community centers, Lambert said, but part of the rationale behind hosting the events there is because those centers are places where children gather.

“[It’s] to take advantage of the opportunit­y to provide informatio­n about the virus, informatio­n about the vaccine, and then share that informatio­n with their parents,” she said. “We’ve had families, parents coming in with the child to give authorizat­ion and then they’ve not been vaccinated, and so they have their vaccinatio­n as well. For those young people and their parents to get vaccinated — that’s a huge win, because that’s a whole household.”

Lambert, a public health veteran who over her career worked at both the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administra­tion, said parental vaccine hesitancy is a longstandi­ng challenge.

“There’s always going to be that element. I think it’s a little bit more so surroundin­g COVID vaccinatio­n. We’re in the midst of a pandemic, and we’ve got all this informatio­n going out that’s not necessaril­y accurate,” she said. “It does take a persistent education effort and messaging, and messages from trusted sources.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Nurse Erin Goett vaccinates Kylee Silvels, 13, at East Lake Park in Chattanoog­a on Saturday. Get Vaccinated Chattanoog­a sponsored the block party event.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON Nurse Erin Goett vaccinates Kylee Silvels, 13, at East Lake Park in Chattanoog­a on Saturday. Get Vaccinated Chattanoog­a sponsored the block party event.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TROY STOLT ?? Mary Lambert, center, the new Director of Community Health for the city of Chattanoog­a, helps Meghan Whitehead, a Nurse Practition­er with Lifespring Community Health, left, put a cooler with COVID vaccines on a table while Latisha Toney, a professor of Community Health at UTC, stands behind them at Eastdale Community Center on Wednesday. Lambert has set up an initiative to provide free COVID-19 vaccines at Community and YFD centers across the city.
STAFF PHOTO BY TROY STOLT Mary Lambert, center, the new Director of Community Health for the city of Chattanoog­a, helps Meghan Whitehead, a Nurse Practition­er with Lifespring Community Health, left, put a cooler with COVID vaccines on a table while Latisha Toney, a professor of Community Health at UTC, stands behind them at Eastdale Community Center on Wednesday. Lambert has set up an initiative to provide free COVID-19 vaccines at Community and YFD centers across the city.

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