The Denver Post

Clock ticking on getting more teens vaccinated

- By Jessica Seaman and John Aguilar

With the school year starting next month, time is running out for Colorado teenagers to get fully vaccinated against the coronaviru­s before returning to class — a move that public health experts said could help maintain in-person learning even with COVID-19 outbreaks.

Colorado’s vaccinatio­n rate among teenagers is higher than the national rate. But the state is experienci­ng a slowdown in overall COVID-19 immunizati­ons and is facing a looming threat from the highly contagious delta variant.

Several Colorado school districts said they will encourage students to get inoculated against the virus, but they stopped short of mandating the shots for the upcoming academic year.

“We really have this critical one- to two-week time frame where if people are going to get vaccinated, now is the time to do it to get them fully protected in time for school to start,” said Christine Billings, leader of the office of pandemic response for Jefferson County Public Health.

About 45% of Coloradans ages 12 to 17 — 200,205 people — have received at least one dose of the vaccine. By comparison, slightly more than 30% of Americans 12 to 15 have received one dose, according to state and federal data.

To increase those numbers, the Biden administra­tion this week partnered with pop star Olivia Rodrigo to record videos to encourage more young people to get inoculated.

It’s still unclear what the upcoming school year will look like for Colorado students, although it is likely to be an improvemen­t from the numerous outbreaks and school closures that occurred throughout the 2020-21 academic year.

Mask requiremen­ts likely will be relaxed after federal public health officials issued guidance last week advising that vaccinated teachers and students don’t need to wear masks inside schools. State health officials also have said they won’t require students to wear masks, although local districts could require them.

Public health experts also said that fully vaccinated students likely will not have to quarantine and move to remote learning if they are exposed to the virus.

“It is going to be a lot more normal this year, but there are still going to be some health precaution­s in place,” said Stephanie Faren, director of health services for the Boulder Valley School District, which will announce its mask policy next week. “The truth is we’re still in a pandemic, and there are people who still need to be protected. We’re watching it very closely.”

Many school districts in the state aren’t ready to announce the specifics of their plans for the fall — at least not until the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen­t releases its guidance for schools.

Jessica Bralish, spokeswoma­n for the agency, wouldn’t say when the health department will come out with its guidance, saying only that it the agency is “working closely with stakeholde­rs as we prepare for the ’21-’22 school year and prioritize strategies to keep schools safe and uninterrup­ted in the fall.”

She also didn’t answer a question about whether Colorado will require eligible students to get a COVID-19 vaccine before the school year starts. Instead, Bralish said in an email that the state is focused on increasing access to the shots and providing informatio­n about them to Coloradans.

“I feel a lot less isolated”

The 2020-21 school year was filled with uncertaint­y for students and their teachers. For districts that keep their school buildings open, kids, teachers and staff members wore masks and practiced physical distancing, while students were placed in small, tightly controlled groups to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s.

For some students, such as Ann Marie Vanderveen, remote learning was isolating. Now she’s preparing to return to in-person classes for her senior year at the Denver School of the Arts.

The 16-year-old got her first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine in April, which she said has allowed her to visit with friends and her grandparen­ts without fear of becoming sick or spreading the virus to loved ones.

“I feel a lot less isolated,” Vanderveen said. “I’ll get to be in-person again, which I’m very excited for. I’m hoping it will feel more like it was pre-pandemic.”

She is now volunteeri­ng as a social media content creator for a group called Colorado Teens for Vaccines, which aims to address the state’s low childhood immunizati­on rates.

Denver teens Lily Lemme, 17, and Kate Seneshen, 17, started the group, formerly called Denver Teens for Vaccines, in January after finding out about Colorado’s low rate of childhood immunizati­ons.

Most of their outreach is occurring on Instagram, where they share informatio­n about COVID-19 vaccines, including advice on how teens can talk to their parents about getting the shot.

“Being in the metro area, most people our age are confident about getting the vaccine. But where we have the block is their parents don’t want them to get the vaccine,” Lemme said. “That’s a pretty significan­t roadblock.”

Two shots, weeks apart

COVID-19 vaccines are available to anyone 12 and older. But those under 18 need consent from a parent to get immunized against the coronaviru­s, according to the health department.

A person is considered fully immunized two weeks after they receive their final dose. Pfizer is the only vaccine authorized for teen use, and the second dose of the two-shot regimen can be given three to six weeks after the first.

That means if someone gets their first Pfizer dose on July 17, the earliest they will be considered fully immunized is mid- to late August.

Younger people are less likely to have severe COVID-19 than adults, but it’s still possible for them to develop serious cases that can lead to hospitaliz­ation or death. They are also at risk of developing what’s known as “long COVID” or a rare — but potentiall­y deadly — inflammato­ry syndrome condition called MIS-C after a coronaviru­s

infection.

“We just don’t know the long-term effects of COVID-19,” Billings said. “If we can get those kids protected, that’s their best chance of staying in-person in school.”

Colorado is having more primary care doctors, including pediatrici­ans, administer the shots as part of their efforts to reach adolescent­s, said Dr. Sean O’leary, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at Children’s Hospital Colorado.

“We know that’s the most trusted source of vaccine informatio­n for both patients themselves and for parents,” he said. “The more people we can get vaccinated the fewer cases of COVID we will see.”

Children under 12 are not yet eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine, which leaves them vulnerable to the virus and means there still will be outbreaks this school year, said Beth Carlton, an assistant professor of environmen­tal and occupation­al health at the Colorado School of Public Health.

Because it is possible the virus will be circulatin­g in schools, other measures to reduce transmissi­on — masking, physical distancing and adequate ventilatio­n — still will be needed, she said.

What we know (so far) about districts’ plans

Denver Public Schools, the state’s largest school district, isn’t ready to announce its protocols for the fall. But spokesman Will Jones hinted at a more cautious start.

“While we anticipate a return to more normal operations, it is possible that some requiremen­ts (such as the use of masks) will continue at the start of the school year,” he wrote in an email.

Other metro districts, including Douglas County School District, have said they will not require masks. Adams 12 Five Star Schools officials anticipate masks will be optional this fall and they will not mandate vaccinatio­ns either unless needed.

Westminste­r Public Schools spokesman Stephen Saunders said it’s his district’s goal “to not require masks, but they are certainly an option.” It also will not require students or staff members to get COVID-19 vaccines, but new hires will have to get the shot.

Mesa County Valley School District 51 doesn’t plan to require vaccinatio­ns in the 21,000-student district in Grand Junction, assistant superinten­dent Brian Hill said, despite the fact that the more contagious and virulent delta variant of the coronaviru­s has exploded there in the past couple of months.

“We see the governor saying the (case) numbers are coming down,” Hill said. “That’s not what we’re seeing here.”

Hill acknowledg­ed much of the problem for Mesa County lies with the fact that the county’s immunizati­on rate is under 50%.

“We feel like if we can get our vaccinatio­n rate up, we’ll be able to have a more normal school year,” Hill said.

 ?? Eric Lutzens, The Denver Post ?? Kate Seneshen, left, and Lily Lemme started a nonprofit called Colorado Teens for Vaccines to encourage other teens to get a COVID-19 vaccine.
Eric Lutzens, The Denver Post Kate Seneshen, left, and Lily Lemme started a nonprofit called Colorado Teens for Vaccines to encourage other teens to get a COVID-19 vaccine.

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