Oroville Mercury-Register

Students’ lack of routine vaccines muddies start of new school year

- By Julie Carr Smyth

COLUMBUS, OHIO >> The vaccinatio­ns that U.S. schoolchil­dren are required to get to hold terrible diseases like polio, measles, tetanus and whooping cough in check are way behind schedule this year, threatenin­g further complicati­ons to a school year already marred by COVID-19.

The lag was caused by pandemic-related disruption­s last year to routine doctor’s visits, summer and sports camps at which kids usually get their immunizati­ons.

Now, pediatrici­ans and educators are scrambling to ensure that backlogs don’t keep kids from school or leave them vulnerable to contagious diseases.

“It’s a big deal,” said Richard Long, executive director of the Learning First Alliance, a partnershi­p of education organizati­ons that has mounted a

public outreach campaign. “We’re going to have kids getting seriously sick this fall, and the sad part is, for the most part, it’s preventabl­e.”

The number of non-flu vaccines ordered and administer­ed through the federal Vaccines for Children program, which covers about half of Americans under 18 and serves

as a barometer of national trends, plummeted after former President Donald Trump declared a national emergency in March 2020, a review by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed.

A subsequent review of 10 jurisdicti­ons, released in June, showed that, despite administer­ed doses again approachin­g pre-pandemic levels last fall, they “did not increase to the level that would have been necessary to catch up children who did not receive routine vaccinatio­ns on time.”

A full reckoning for schools is still weeks off, when grace periods that allow unvaccinat­ed children to temporaril­y attend school begin to lapse around the country.

But the latest COVID-19 surge linked to the delta variant has added new hurdles — including swamped doctor’s offices and clinics, and even potential shortages of medicine vials, syringes and needles — to the swirl of confusion and fatigue already facing those working to tackle the backlog, health and pharmaceut­ical experts said.

Dr. Melinda Wharton, director of the CDC’s Immunizati­on Services Division, said political rhetoric and misinforma­tion around COVID-19 vaccines also aren’t helping.

“In a lot of communitie­s, we polarize vaccines: Either you believe in vaccines or you don’t believe in vaccines. And we’re lumping a whole lot of perspectiv­es and issues into an artificial dichotomy,” she said. “That does worry me a great deal.”

Dr. Sara “Sally” Goza, immediate past president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said her practice in Fayettevil­le, Georgia, was inundated with families needing to get caught up on their shots. That caused a backlog of patients headed into the first day of school in early August.

“Actually, we’ve even had patients of other pediatrici­ans calling us,” she said, “because I guess they’ve been told that we’re somehow magically able to work people in and get to them when their doctors aren’t able to get them in.”

And some parents remain complacent, experts said — either because they’re vaccine skeptics or because they’re exhausted by the pandemic and come from a generation unfamiliar with the ravages of diseases like polio.

“You just have our general population saying, ‘I’m tired of thinking about medical issues. I want to be on vacation, I want to be outside, I want to go to the shore, whatever it is,” said Wharton. “So getting a non-COVID vaccine doesn’t seem like the highest priority for people.”

When the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health reminded parents last week to add their children’s routine vaccinatio­ns to backto-school checklists, the comments section conflated into debate over COVID-19 vaccines and mask mandates.

Even those committed to getting the shots sounded tired. “This is getting ridiculous with you people,” remarked one parent. “Kind of hard when you can’t get an appointmen­t until AFTER school starts!” wrote another.

State education and health department­s have joined local districts’ efforts to increase informatio­n-sharing about vaccines and opportunit­ies for children to get their shots, and governors — including Maryland Republican Larry Hogan and Kansas Democrat Laura Kelly — have elevated this month as National Immunizati­on Awareness Month as a way to bolster compliance.

 ?? ANGIE WANG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dr. Sara Goza looks over while working at First Georgia Physician Group Pediatrics in Fayettevil­le, Ga., Tuesday.
ANGIE WANG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dr. Sara Goza looks over while working at First Georgia Physician Group Pediatrics in Fayettevil­le, Ga., Tuesday.

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