Houston Chronicle Sunday

No vaccines, no child care: Parents of young kids stuck in limbo

- By J. David Goodman and Giulia Heyward

HOUSTON — Twice last year, Margaret Schulte and her husband, Jason Abercrombi­e, traveled 11 hours roundtrip to Louisiana from their home in Tulsa, Okla., in the hopes of vaccinatin­g their children, who were 2 and 4, against the coronaviru­s.

The only way they could get shots for their children — among the more than 19 million Americans younger than 5 who are not yet eligible for vaccinatio­ns — was to take part in a clinical trial. So they signed up, hoping a successful vaccine would mean that by now, or at least sometime very soon, a semblance of pre-pandemic life would be on the horizon.

It has not worked out that way. The Pfizer trial that their children participat­ed in did not produce promising results, the company said last month. Nor have vaccines emerged from other corners. Moderna has yet to release results of its pediatric trials.

Now Schulte and Abercrombi­e are among the millions of parents stuck in an excruciati­ng limbo during a surge of omicron cases, forced to wrestle with day care closures and child care crises as the rest of the world appears eager to move on.

“I am actually home with my daughter right now,” Schulte, 41, who owns a garden store and is eight months pregnant, said when reached by phone this week. There had been a positive case at her 2-year-old’s preschool. “This is our fourth or fifth time being quarantine­d,” she said. “There’s no getting work done while she’s around.”

The nearly vertical rise of coronaviru­s cases in recent weeks has complicate­d the calculatio­ns of many families with children younger than 5, a population prone to the runny noses and coughs that now prompt waves of anxiety.

Tests are hard to come by. Day care providers are strained. There are roughly 110,000 fewer people working in child care now compared with February 2020, according to research from the University of California, Berkeley.

Mounting interrupti­ons

With child care interrupti­ons mounting, parents of young children have again found themselves sequestere­d at home, staring out windows, wondering anew if the world cares about the seemingly impossible balancing acts they are having to perform.

“The stress just comes from seeing that the rest of society has kind of moved on, and then parents of young kids and the young kids themselves seem to be forgotten,” said Becky Quinn, a lawyer in New York City. She and her husband found themselves stuck this week with both children and no child care in their one-bedroom Brooklyn apartment.

“First we got the notificati­on on Saturday that the baby’s was closed. We were like, OK, we can make that work,” Quinn said. “Then on Sunday we heard that the 3-year-old’s class was closed. I just laughed at that point.”

Both she and her husband are able to work remotely, a privilege she acknowledg­ed not everyone has. And her bosses have been understand­ing, she said. But it has still been difficult.

The convergenc­e of repeated closures of day care centers and classrooms with the realizatio­n that a vaccine for young children could still be many months away has forced many parents to make uncomforta­ble choices, particular­ly women.

Aria Carter, who lives in rural Vermont, stepped back from her job as director of admissions for a school because of child care difficulti­es. Now she reads psychologi­cal evaluation­s for admissions, a role she can do at odd hours or while her 1-year-old son is napping and her 4-year-old son is at school.

“I can’t get him in day care, there’s no space,” Carter said of her toddler. “I don’t have any family where I live. It’s hard.” But she added that the spread of the omicron variant meant she would not have felt comfortabl­e putting him in day care anyway, and that she had enjoyed her time at home with him.

Shaneka Adewuyi, an office administra­tor for the Tulsa Police Department, said that at one point her day care center closed for six weeks because of a surge in cases. The challenge of juggling two young children, ages 1 and 2, along with a 9-year-old in virtual school, plus her job, is enough to bring Adewuyi to tears.

“It takes a toll on my mental health,” she said. “But the babies need to eat, they have to be rocked to sleep, they need a diaper change.”

For some parents, the abnormalit­y of the pandemic began with pregnancie­s consumed by concern about the effects of infection or the vaccines. Routines have been altered for so long that many of their children have never experience­d, or can no longer remember, how things were before a life of quarantine­s and masks.

Abercrombi­e, 39, said he was taken aback when his 4-year-old, Andy, did not want to play with other children at a playground. “He said they might have the sickness,” Abercrombi­e recalled. “How is that, to grow up if you think other children might give them the sickness?”

Waiting months for shots

Vaccines, a key part of the federal response to the pandemic, have proved challengin­g to get right for young children. While shots are already available for those 5 and older, parents of children 4 and younger may have to wait months more for a vaccine that works.

Even when they are available, many parents may choose not to give them to their young children. Vaccinatio­n rates remain very low — under 20 percent — among the youngest eligible group, ages 5-11.

Young children are at much less risk of becoming severely ill after a coronaviru­s infection when compared with adults, doctors have said. While hospitaliz­ations have gone up for children, the overall numbers remain very low.

In Austin, Kyle and Tasha Countryman count themselves among the lucky: They both have jobs that are busier than ever — in constructi­on and furniture sales — and the day care where they send their children, who are 1 and 2, has closed certain classes only a couple of times during the pandemic.

They were very cautious while Tasha Countryman, 36, was pregnant.

“None of us wanted to get sick before I delivered,” she said.

Now, she said, her goal is to give the children as normal a life as possible. That means seeing family, friends and cousins and going out to places where masks are not required.

“We do that so our kids can see other kids’ faces,” Countryman said. “I don’t want to go to some of these indoor places if it’s going to be very, ‘Stand here and everybody wear masks.’ Those are not the places that we’re actively seeking out to spend our time. We’re going to more restaurant­s, breweries, activities that we can do outside.”

She said that she and her husband would not feel comfortabl­e getting a coronaviru­s vaccine for their children right away, and would want to make sure that any risk of side effects did not outweigh the benefits.

For Schulte, whose two young children participat­ed in the Pfizer vaccine trial, the promise of a new vaccine has given way to more waiting.

“They’ve already told us that we’ll need to come back for a third dose because it didn’t generate enough of an immune response,” she said.

“We had hoped that by now we would learn that one of our children was fully vaccinated and we could move on,” she said. “It would have been nice, but a trial is a trial.”

 ?? September Dawn Bottoms / New York Times ?? Shaneka Adewuyi sits near two of her children, Stella, 2, and Julius, 1, on Thursday at their home in Tulsa, Okla. Parents continue to struggle with mounting child care issues as the virus surges.
September Dawn Bottoms / New York Times Shaneka Adewuyi sits near two of her children, Stella, 2, and Julius, 1, on Thursday at their home in Tulsa, Okla. Parents continue to struggle with mounting child care issues as the virus surges.
 ?? September Dawn Bottoms / New York Times ?? Jason Abercrombi­e holds his daughter Mary during a COVID-19 test on Thursday in Broken Arrow, Okla. Mary, 2, was exposed to someone with the virus.
September Dawn Bottoms / New York Times Jason Abercrombi­e holds his daughter Mary during a COVID-19 test on Thursday in Broken Arrow, Okla. Mary, 2, was exposed to someone with the virus.
 ?? Richard Beaven / New York Times ?? Aria Carter plays with her kids on Thursday in Dummerston, Vt. Carter adjusted her work schedule due to the lack of child care.
Richard Beaven / New York Times Aria Carter plays with her kids on Thursday in Dummerston, Vt. Carter adjusted her work schedule due to the lack of child care.

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