Los Angeles Times

Kid vaccine rates ‘disturbing’

Experts sound alarm on low levels of youths 5 to 11 getting shots

- By Lindsey Tanner Tanner writes for the Associated Press. AP writers Rebecca Santana in New Orleans and Adriana Gómez Licón in Miami contribute­d to this report.

Suspicion, misinforma­tion, complacenc­y and delays because of the holidays and bad weather have combined to produce alarmingly low COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rates in U.S. children ages 5 to 11, authoritie­s say.

As of Tuesday, just over 17% were fully vaccinated, more than two months after shots for the age group became available. While Vermont is at 48%, California is just shy of 19% and Mississipp­i is only at 5%.

Vaccinatio­ns among the elementary school set surged after the shots were introduced in the fall, but the numbers have crept up slowly since then, and the Omicron variant’s explosive spread appears to have had little effect.

The low rates are “very disturbing,” said Dr. Robert Murphy, executive director for the Institute for Global Health at Northweste­rn University’s Feinberg School of Medicine. “It’s just amazing.”

Parents who hesitate “are taking an enormous risk and continuing to fuel the pandemic,” Murphy said.

Hospitaliz­ations of children younger than 18 with COVID-19 in the U.S. have climbed to their highest levels on record in the last few weeks.

The low vaccinatio­n rates and rising hospitaliz­ations are “a gut punch, especially when we’ve been working so hard to keep these kids well,” said Dr. Natasha Burgert, a pediatrici­an in Overland Park, Kan.

The vaccines have proved highly safe and effective at reducing the risk of severe illness, hospitaliz­ation and death.

Overall, 63% of Americans are fully vaccinated. Among children 12 to 17, the rate is 54%.

COVID-19 shots for young children have been authorized in at least 12 countries. In Canada, where PfizerBioN­Tech shots were cleared for ages 5 to 11 in November, just 2% are fully vaccinated.

Snowstorms and other heavy weather in December are believed to have slowed the pace of vaccinatio­n in the U.S., along with the holiday season. Still, many parents have other concerns.

Chicago mother Kendra Shaw has resisted shots for her two school-age children, saying she worries about possible risks and isn’t convinced the benefits are worth it. But this week, her 10-year-old daughter pleaded to get vaccinated so she wouldn’t miss school, and her soon-to-be 7-yearold son asked for his shots so he could have a big birthday party.

Shaw scheduled their first doses for Wednesday but said: “I’m really on the fence.”

Daniel Kotzin, of Denver, said he believed he made the right decision not to vaccinate his 5-year-old daughter and 7-year-old son because most Omicron cases seem to be relatively mild.

“They are essentiall­y at no risk of harm, so I really don’t understand the reason to vaccinate them,” he said.

Doctors say that kind of thinking is misguided.

“It’s true, kids in general do better than adults with COVID,” said Dr. Elizabeth Murray, a pediatric emergency medicine physician in Rochester, N.Y., and a spokeswoma­n for the American Academy of Pediatrics. “But ‘not too sick’ still can mean miserable with fevers and muscle aches for a week. It can also mean MIS-C or long COVID.”

MIS-C, or multisyste­m inflammato­ry syndrome, is a rare but serious condition linked to COVID-19 that can affect many organs and typically requires hospitaliz­ation.

Authoritie­s don’t think Omicron is making children and adults more seriously ill than other coronaviru­s variants, and say hospitaliz­ation rates are up partly because it is so much more contagious.

Some children have been admitted for underlying conditions such as lung disease, diabetes and sickle cell disease that have worsened because of an Omicron infection, doctors say.

Dr. Jesse Hackell, a pediatrici­an in Pomona, N.Y., said that at least 25% of his patients ages 5 to 11 are vaccinated, but that after an initial rush in the fall, the numbers have dwindled.

“It’s a tough sell,” he said. “We’re not ready” is a common comment, Hackell said. “When I ask, ‘What are you waiting for?’ I get kind of a shrug. I’ve had a few say, ‘We’re not going to be the first million. We’ll wait to see what happens.’ ”

Hackell said the government’s vaccinatio­n campaign is clearly struggling against misinforma­tion and “pseudoscie­nce,” the likes of which he has never seen in his 40-plus years as a pediatrici­an. He said the government needs to get tough and mandate the shots.

“If we could get every kid vaccinated across the board, it would go a long way. It wouldn’t end the pandemic, but it would end the severe disease,” Hackell said. “It could help turn the virus into nothing more serious than the common cold, and we can deal with that.”

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