Chattanooga Times Free Press

Fired vax chief blasts halt to outreach for teens

- BY MARTA W. ALDRICH CHALKBEAT TENNESSEE

Tennessee has decided to halt all vaccine outreach for children and adolescent­s preparing to head back to school, which will cost lives and could worsen the state’s current resurgence of COVID-19 cases, the pediatrici­an fired last week as the state’s top immunizati­on official said.

Dr. Michelle Fiscus is especially afraid that students from communitie­s of color and lowincome families could become the latest casualties in what she calls a politicize­d tug-ofwar over vaccines and the pandemic.

“The timing is really bad,” Fiscus said.

Tennessee has placed a moratorium on statecoord­inated immunizati­on promotions for children while also having one of the nation’s lowest COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rates — 38% of Tennessean­s are fully vaccinated against the virus. Meanwhile, cases of the more contagious delta variant are surging amid mixed pandemic messaging from officials and general COVID-19 fatigue.

“I’m fearful of what this is going to look like as school begins,” said Fiscus, former medical director of vaccine-preventabl­e diseases and immunizati­on programs at the Tennessee Department of Health.

In an interview Wednesday with Chalkbeat, Fiscus discussed the dangers of anti-vaccine rhetoric and offered advice to pandemic-weary school leaders for the coming academic year, including districts that have opted to loosen or eliminate mask mandates.

“I’m fearful of what this is going to look like as school begins.”

Her firing Monday by Dr. Lisa Piercey, Tennessee’s health commission­er, came just days after Piercey halted statespons­ored immunizati­on events on school properties. The commission­er also ordered a moratorium on COVID-19 vaccine messaging aimed at adolescent­s.

The state has indicated Fiscus was fired over management issues. A health department spokeswoma­n said Tennessee supports vaccine outreach “while being mindful of hesitancy and the intense national conversati­on that is affecting how many families evaluate vaccinatio­ns in general.”

But Fiscus believes the orders stem from a legislativ­e hearing last month when Piercey was grilled by angry Republican lawmakers who charged that Fiscus was targeting minors for mass vaccinatio­ns without parental consent.

The Q&A below has been lightly edited for brevity and clarity.

Chalkbeat: What will be the impact of the state’s decision to eliminate COVID-19 vaccine outreach to teens?

Fiscus: We’ve had this vaccine available since May 10 for adolescent­s — plenty of time to get to herd immunity. But we’re at less than 13% fully vaccinated right now for kids 12-15 and nearly 24% for ages 16-20. That’s a largely unvaccinat­ed youth population who will return to hallways and pep rallies and basketball games and not wearing masks.

Is Tennessee positioned to launch a new school year safely?

The timing is really bad. School starts in three or four weeks in most places in Tennessee, and we’re going to bring in kids 11 and under with no ability to protect themselves with a vaccine, no remote learning to speak of, less physical distancing and masking. It’s important to know that this delta variant is more transmissi­ble and is impacting children more severely than what we saw with the original COVID cases. In the last two weeks, our cases [for all ages] have gone up 400% [to 4,700 active cases], and the vast majority of those have been among the unvaccinat­ed.

Last school year, you had almost weekly conference calls with Tennessee school leaders to offer informatio­n on how best to navigate the pandemic. What recommenda­tions would you give those same leaders now?

They should spread the message that children 12 and older and their school staff need to be vaccinated. For those who aren’t fully vaccinated, they should wear a mask when they’re in school. And for kids 11 and under who aren’t eligible for vaccinatio­n, mask mandates should absolutely stay in place.

As for in-person vs. remote learning, I totally agree with the need to prioritize in-person learning. But schools have got to take mitigation steps seriously if they’re going to stay in person. If they don’t, this delta variant is going to come through like a tidal wave, and we’re going to have sick and dead kids. We’ve already had 10 Tennessee kids die of COVID [since the pandemic began].

The state’s recent moratorium on vaccine outreach went beyond COVID-19 to include all vaccine-preventabl­e diseases for children and youth. What are the possible ramificati­ons?

We were told to do no communicat­ions whatsoever this August around National Immunizati­on Awareness Month. We’ve always done a media blitz, sent out a press release, asked the governor for a proclamati­on, but all of that was halted this year. We had reminder cards ready to mail out to parents whose children were missing a vaccine, but they didn’t go out.

All of this hurts public health. There will be children who die from HPV-related cancers because they missed their vaccine during the pandemic and nobody reminded them to get it done. We have communitie­s who are vulnerable to measles. And if you think COVID is contagious, wait until we have another measles outbreak because measles is nine times more infectious than COVID. California’s got a measles outbreak right now.

Tennessee law requires that, before entering kindergart­en, children are up to date with their immunizati­ons against diseases such as measles, mumps and rubella. The state had a pre-pandemic vaccinatio­n rate of 95% for those children. How will the outreach moratorium affect that process?

It’s always been hard, but it will be harder now. Three things could happen. First, more kids showing up to kindergart­en will be told they can’t go to school because they’re not vaccinated, so Mom and Dad will have to leave work to take them to their doctor or the health department to get vaccinated before they can come back. Second, a parent who learns their child can’t come to school may decide to file a religious exemption out of convenienc­e, which would be committing perjury under Tennessee law. Third, a school may not do their due diligence in reviewing immunizati­on records, so that we have unvaccinat­ed kids attending who shouldn’t be there.

What does this moratorium mean for children of color and lowerincom­e communitie­s with historical­ly lower vaccinatio­n rates?

Disparitie­s in Tennessee vaccinatio­ns used to be most pronounced with flu shots, but now we’re seeing a widening gap in routine childhood vaccinatio­ns and kids not being up to date by age 2 in our African American communitie­s.

When you’re talking about low-wage earners working multiple jobs and friends or family watching their kids, parents don’t have the time to take their child to the health department or to a clinic to get vaccinated. Their priority is getting food on the table and a roof over their heads. We’re hurting these communitie­s when we remove the ability of parents to get their children vaccinated at school in partnershi­p with their local health department­s. And these are communitie­s that already have higher rates of chronic disease — diabetes, heart disease, hypertensi­on — that we know die disproport­ionately from COVID-19.

Getting vaccinatio­n services at schools is preferred by so many parents. It’s just easier. It’s free. Kids can get their shots with their peers, so it’s more comfortabl­e. There’s no reason to disrupt that routine.

Will urban areas be hardest hit?

They have the bulk of low-income population­s, but fortunatel­y, our metro health partners [in Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville, Chattanoog­a, Jackson, and Sullivan County] are independen­t of this mess. They’re still doing in-school vaccinatio­ns and ramping up those back-toschool communicat­ion efforts. But for our rural poor population­s, partnershi­ps have been canceled between the department of health and school systems to provide vaccinatio­ns for back to school and for flu in the fall. Now those families are left to figure out where they’re going to get their kids vaccinated.

Ultimately, public trust is key to good public health. How will Tennessee regain trust in its public health systems after so much infighting over vaccines, especially for school-age children?

I hope Tennessean­s will still trust their local health department­s. Local health officials are not being deceitful. They are doing everything they can to care for families but they’ve been handcuffed under a toxic environmen­t in which individual­s with political agendas and aspiration­s have sold out the people of Tennessee. Local health workers are true heroes and champions of public health.

 ??  ?? Michelle Fiscus
Michelle Fiscus
 ?? PHOTO BY MARTA W. ALDRICH / CHALKBEAT ?? Dr. Michelle Fiscus is the former director of immunizati­on programs at the Tennessee Department of Health. She says she was fired in political retaliatio­n over informatio­n she distribute­d about COVID vaccinatio­ns for teenagers.
PHOTO BY MARTA W. ALDRICH / CHALKBEAT Dr. Michelle Fiscus is the former director of immunizati­on programs at the Tennessee Department of Health. She says she was fired in political retaliatio­n over informatio­n she distribute­d about COVID vaccinatio­ns for teenagers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States