The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Young teens flock to shots after vaccine approval

After year in lockdown, many eager to resume lives.

- By Ty Tagami | ty.tagami@ajc.com and Ariel Hart | ahart@ajc.com

A line of adolescent­s and their parents stood in the drizzling rain outside a Decatur pediatrici­ans’ office Wednesday, awaiting their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine.

Parents of more than a thousand children aged 12 to 15 seized the opportunit­y for their children to get a shot of the Pfizer-biontech vaccine at the Dekalb Pediatric Center, which partnered with the local school system. For many, the pinprick was the first ticket on a journey to freedom after more than a year of life in lockdown.

“I haven’t really been able to do anything. I haven’t gotten to hang out with my friends,” said Rozzie Anderson, 15, a sophomore at Decatur High School who had just gotten a shot with her younger brother, Matthew, 13. Rozzie’s cheery outlook contrasted with the overcast sky: She was thinking about the sleepaway camp she and her brother are planning to attend this summer, when they’ll cousins for the first time in more than a year.

Their mom, Catherine, was looking forward

In a Kaiser Family Foundation poll of parents with kids 12 to 15 years old, 23% said they would not get their child vaccinated. The national poll, taken in the second half of April, also found that another 18% would only vaccinate them if their school required it, and 26% were in wait-and-see mode.

to sending them into classrooms in the fall. “I’m so thankful that the kids can get back to life as we knew it,” she said.

The Georgia Department of Public Health said Tuesday that any vaccine provider enrolled in the state to use Pfizer could immediatel­y begin administer­ing it to those aged 12-15 after Monday’s emergency use authorizat­ion for that age group by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion. The state is working to enroll pediatrici­ans in the vaccine program and did not say how many now have Pfizer doses, but kids this young can go anyplace an adult can for the Pfizer vaccine, the only one authorized for minors.

The government-operated mass vaccinatio­n site at Mercedes-benz Stadium in Atlanta had already started jabbing adolescent­s Tuesday. Dr. Jane Wilkov, the founder of the Dekalb Pediatric Center, said many patients who were scheduled for doses at her facility Wednesday were so eager that they took their children to the stadium Tuesday and canceled with her at the last minute. The state reported a preliminar­y count of 33 shots administer­ed Tuesday in Fulton County, the location of the stadium.

Most parents likely will take their kids to pharmacies and government-run sites in the near term, because manufactur­ers are not yet set up to deliver vaccines at the smaller, more manageable scale required by many doctor’s offices.

The Pfizer vaccine has been delivered in trays of 1,170 doses. It must be stored in ultra-cold freezers over the long term, and since many facilities don’t have such freezers, they would have just over two weeks to use the doses when storing them in a normal freezer.

Administer­ing that many doses over such a short time would be difficult for a typical pediatrici­an’s office, said Dr. Hugo Scornik, a pediatrici­an in Conyers and Georgia president of the American Academy of Pediatrics. A DPH spokeswoma­n confirmed the agency was working to deliver doses in more manageable sizes and said some providers will get smaller allotments as soon as this week.

On Wednesday afternoon, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s vaccine advisory panel recommende­d the use of Pfizer with 12- to 15-year-olds. Hours later, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky officially adopted the recommenda­tion, completing the federal review process of the Pfizer vaccine for now.

The committee’s unanimous vote came after presentati­ons from scientists. They concluded that data so far show the benefits of the vaccine for children outweigh the risks.

Two pediatric infectious disease experts with the Emory University School of Medicine addressed safety concerns in an online talk Tuesday, saying they would give the Pfizer vaccine to their own children.

Scientists who presented the trial results to the committee Wednesday said that among the 1,131 adolescent children in the study who had received the Pfizer vaccine, many experience­d no reaction. Among those who did, the reactions were similar to those experience­d by older teenagers. The most common were temporary fatigue and headaches.

Experts say they are reassured by the safety data from that research and from the data from vaccinatin­g millions of 16- and 17-year-olds, for whom the vaccine was authorized in March.

There are about 1,800 students enrolled in grades 7 through 10 in Decatur, so a substantia­l portion of that population is on track for second doses and the fullest possible immunity by late June, well ahead of the next school year.

Decatur schools Superinten­dent Maggie Fehrman said last week she was anticipati­ng a fall reopening that will be much closer to normal than last fall, with more students in classrooms, less social distancing and the removal of most of the transparen­t cough shields around desks.

Any sense of normalcy will be delayed for elementary schools, though. Pfizer-biontech has announced it plans to file for emergency use authorizat­ion for its COVID19 vaccine in ages 2 to 11, but not until September.

The rush to immunize 12to 15-year-olds in Decatur may prove to be a blip in a much slower rollout among the state’s adolescent­s. The city has many parents who work at the CDC and in medical or research roles at Emory University.

Vaccine uptake has been slower in other parts of Georgia with less trust in the science behind this vaccine. Georgia is well behind other states in vaccinatio­n of adults, and polling shows widespread hesitancy among parents nationally.

In a Kaiser Family Foundation poll of parents with kids aged 12 to 15, 23% said they would not get their child vaccinated. The national poll, taken in the second half of April, also found that another 18% would only vaccinate them if their school required it, and 26% were in wait-and-see mode. Less than a third were eager to vaccinate their child.

Public health officials say vaccinatin­g children is important both for their own safety and for the overall fight against the pandemic.

The full embrace of the Pfizer vaccine by Rossie and Matthew Anderson in Decatur was perhaps understand­able. Their dad, Dr. Evan Anderson, is an associate professor of pediatrics and medicine at Emory, and has been involved in clinical trials of COVID-19 vaccines.

Betty Kidanu, another mother at the Dekalb clinic on Wednesday, described herself as conflicted. Her daughter, Miriam Araya, 15, wants to go to a summer sleepaway camp. Kidanu was concerned about vaccine safety but wanted to let her daughter go to the camp without fear of infection.

“It was not easy to make the decision,” she said.

 ??  ?? Miriam Araya, 15, looks away as she receives a first dose of the Pfizer vaccine from Melissa Dalton.
Miriam Araya, 15, looks away as she receives a first dose of the Pfizer vaccine from Melissa Dalton.
 ?? PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Lucy Saravia, 13, receives a first dose of the Pfizer vaccine Wednesday from Pheona Mack (right) as Saravia’s mother Robin Mead steadies her at Dekalb Pediatric Center. More than a thousand patients took advantage of the chance to get their first shot at the clinic that’s partnering with the local school system to vaccinate students.
PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Lucy Saravia, 13, receives a first dose of the Pfizer vaccine Wednesday from Pheona Mack (right) as Saravia’s mother Robin Mead steadies her at Dekalb Pediatric Center. More than a thousand patients took advantage of the chance to get their first shot at the clinic that’s partnering with the local school system to vaccinate students.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Young people and their families line up to wait in the drizzling rain at Dekalb Pediatric Center for their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine in Decatur. Their first jab would be the Pfizer vaccine, the only one approved for their age group thus far.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Young people and their families line up to wait in the drizzling rain at Dekalb Pediatric Center for their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine in Decatur. Their first jab would be the Pfizer vaccine, the only one approved for their age group thus far.

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